| Literature DB >> 28062643 |
Jon Minton1, Richard Shaw2, Mark A Green3, Laura Vanderbloemen4, Frank Popham2, Gerry McCartney5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Scotland has higher mortality rates than the rest of Western Europe (rWE), with more cardiovascular disease and cancer among older adults; and alcohol-related and drug-related deaths, suicide and violence among younger adults.Entities:
Keywords: DEMOGRAPHY; GEOGRAPHY; Health inequalities; Life course epidemiology; METHODOLOGY
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28062643 PMCID: PMC5484031 DOI: 10.1136/jech-2016-207379
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Epidemiol Community Health ISSN: 0143-005X Impact factor: 3.710
Figure 1Historic differences between Scotland and rUK, the Golden Cohort, and young adults in the 1990s and 2000s. Note: long-term mortality differences between Scotland and rUK, all ages, 1950–1995. The overall colour within this region is pink/red, indicating slightly higher mortality risk in Scotland at almost all ages, throughout the period and for both sexes (figure 2, A0, A1, A2). Each of these differences at each age and in each year may be quite small, but they accumulate over the life course, leading to substantial differences in the life expectancy between Scotland and the other UK countries. The ‘Golden Cohort’, at all ages from early childhood to adulthood through to the start of retirement age, males in the UK born in the 1950s tended to experience lower mortality risk than age-matched Western European males. This difference is relatively consistent throughout but strongest (darkest blue) at two ages—young childhood and early adulthood (figure 2, B, B0). For young adults in the 1990s and 2000s, mortality risk in Scotland worsened relative to rUK, particular among males and from the mid-2000s onwards (figure 2, C, C*). The female/rUK difference over the same period/age range has not fallen as much further, suggesting this recent change is differentiated by sex. rUK, rest of the UK.
Figure 2Three age/year regions of interest within figure 1. Region A is red, region B is blue and region C is green. WE, Western Europe.
Period-based cumulative excess deaths per 100 000 population, by various ages
| Decade | 1 | 5 | 10 | 20 | 30 | 40 | 50 | 60 | 70 | 80 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1950s | 648 | 705 | 745 | 843 | 1077 | 1506 | 2303 | 3868 | 5240 | 4341 |
| 1960s | 364 | 401 | 424 | 436 | 544 | 861 | 1669 | 3292 | 4932 | 4406 |
| 1970s | 114 | 140 | 153 | 173 | 292 | 644 | 1520 | 3231 | 5040 | 4330 |
| 1980s | −17 | −9 | 2 | 40 | 173 | 444 | 1223 | 3071 | 5481 | 5672 |
| 1990s | −16 | −7 | 0 | 83 | 325 | 567 | 1226 | 2906 | 5560 | 6360 |
| 2000s | −35 | −29 | −24 | 80 | 367 | 807 | 1453 | 2795 | 5361 | 7203 |
| Decade | 1 | 5 | 10 | 20 | 30 | 40 | 50 | 60 | 70 | 80 |
| 1950s | −312 | −328 | −314 | −311 | −312 | −156 | 343 | 2069 | 4627 | 4132 |
| 1960s | 75 | 72 | 65 | −12 | −162 | −144 | 524 | 2409 | 4932 | 4368 |
| 1970s | 111 | 110 | 97 | −32 | −160 | −110 | 517 | 2703 | 5566 | 4820 |
| 1980s | 40 | 35 | 33 | 3 | −75 | −72 | 359 | 2384 | 6473 | 7288 |
| 1990s | 35 | 39 | 42 | 80 | 215 | 261 | 511 | 2043 | 5985 | 8792 |
| 2000s | 46 | 51 | 56 | 152 | 435 | 910 | 1349 | 2327 | 5364 | 8828 |
| Decade | 1 | 5 | 10 | 20 | 30 | 40 | 50 | 60 | 70 | 80 |
| 1950s | −888 | −956 | −977 | −1063 | −1273 | −1505 | −1724 | −1407 | −78 | 240 |
| 1960s | −250 | −286 | −314 | −403 | −652 | −922 | −987 | −566 | 485 | 397 |
| 1970s | 12 | −13 | −38 | −184 | −419 | −688 | −855 | −211 | 1030 | 929 |
| 1980s | 56 | 44 | 33 | −32 | −230 | −475 | −753 | −396 | 1528 | 2183 |
| 1990s | 50 | 46 | 42 | 6 | −80 | −257 | −609 | −600 | 954 | 3055 |
| 2000s | 79 | 78 | 80 | 81 | 101 | 173 | 25 | −218 | 502 | 2323 |
These estimates are primarily for illustration as they are not based on birth cohorts, and are equivalent to taking decade-wide ‘vertical slices’ through data used to produce figure 1. The number in the top row is an age in years. The numbers in the columns below these ages show the number of cumulative excess deaths per 100 000 population (50 000 male and 50 000 female at birth) by that age, based on differences in age-specific/sex-specific mortality rates between (A) Scotland and rUK, (B) Scotland and rWE, (C) UK and rWE, in each of the 10 years within the decade indicated by the row. Positive values indicate excess deaths in Scotland (A, B) or the UK (C), and negative values indicate fewer deaths compared with rUK (A) or rWE (B, C).
rUK, rest of the UK; rWE, rest of Western Europe.
Cohort-based cumulative excess deaths per 100 000 population, by various ages
| Birth cohort | 1 | 5 | 10 | 20 | 30 | 40 | 50 | 60 | 70 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1930s | 2274 | 2480 | 2551 | 2718 | 2809 | 3061 | 3764 | 5079 | 7000 |
| 1940S | 1516 | 1647 | 1698 | 1708 | 1812 | 2093 | 2700 | 4039 | |
| 1950S | 615 | 649 | 670 | 691 | 808 | 1010 | 1615 | ||
| 1960S | 363 | 401 | 419 | 456 | 627 | 982 | |||
| 1970s | 128 | 148 | 160 | 223 | 503 | ||||
| 1930s | 1593 | 1838 | 1845 | 1881 | 1737 | 1699 | 2100 | 3398 | 6143 |
| 1940s | −30 | −51 | −23 | −92 | −210 | −174 | 113 | 1312 | |
| 1950s | −299 | −333 | −336 | −454 | −565 | −600 | −281 | ||
| 1960s | 77 | 80 | 68 | 9 | 30 | 354 | |||
| 1970s | 119 | 114 | 111 | 133 | 378 | ||||
| 1930s | −377 | −308 | −363 | −476 | −703 | −971 | −1209 | −1102 | −91 |
| 1940s | −1366 | −1504 | −1522 | −1600 | −1814 | −2035 | −2302 | −2323 | |
| 1950s | −846 | −910 | −932 | −1068 | −1286 | −1506 | −1738 | ||
| 1960s | −247 | −278 | −306 | −399 | −534 | −534 | |||
| 1970s | 7 | −16 | −30 | −65 | −76 | ||||
The number in the top row is an age in years. The numbers in the columns below these ages show the number of cumulative excess deaths per 100 000 population (50 000 male and 50 000 female at birth) by that age, based on differences in age-specific/sex-specific mortality rates between (A) Scotland and rUK, (B) Scotland and rWE, (C) UK and rWE, for each birth cohort (by age of birth in single years) indicate by the birth cohort decade. Positive values indicate excess deaths in Scotland (A, B) or the UK (C), and negative values indicate fewer deaths compared with rUK (A) or rWE (B, C).
rUK, rest of the UK; rWE, rest of Western Europe.