| Literature DB >> 34786008 |
Andreas Höhn1,2,3, Anna Oksuzyan2, Rune Lindahl-Jacobsen3,4, Kaare Christensen3,5, Rosie Seaman2,6.
Abstract
Women have consistently lower mortality rates than men at all ages and with respect to most causes. However, gender differences regarding hospital admission rates are more mixed, varying across ages and causes. A number of intuitive metrics have previously been used to explore changes in hospital admissions over time, but have not explicitly quantified the gender gap or estimated the cumulative contribution from cause-specific admission rates. Using register data for the total Danish population between 1995 and 2014, we estimated the time to first hospital admission for Danish men and women aged 60. This is an intuitive population-level metric with the same interpretive and mathematical properties as period life expectancy. Using a decomposition approach, we were able to quantify the cumulative contributions from eight causes of hospital admission to the gender gap in time to first hospital admission. Between 1995 and 2014, time to first admission increased for both, men (7.6 to 9.4 years) and women (8.3 to 10.3 years). However, the magnitude of gender differences in time to first admission remained relatively stable within this time period (0.7 years in 1995, 0.9 years in 2014). After age 60, Danish men had consistently higher rates of admission for cardiovascular conditions and neoplasms, but lower rates of admission for injuries, musculoskeletal disorders, and sex-specific causes. Although admission rates for both genders have generally declined over the last decades, the same major causes of admission accounted for the gender gap. Persistent gender differences in causes of admission are, therefore, important to consider when planning the delivery of health care in times of population ageing. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10433-021-00614-w.Entities:
Keywords: Gender differences; Health; Healthcare use; Hospital admissions
Year: 2021 PMID: 34786008 PMCID: PMC8563932 DOI: 10.1007/s10433-021-00614-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Ageing ISSN: 1613-9372
Fig. 1Number of all Danish Men and Women aged 60+, men and women aged 60+ at risk of first admission, and number of first hospital admissions among men and women aged 60+, 1995 to 2014
Fig. 2Trends in remaining time to first hospital admission for Danish men and women of exact age 60, for inpatient admissions lasting for a minimum of 2 treatment days, 1995 to 2014. Note: The peak between 2007 and 2009 corresponds with administrative restructuring of healthcare in Denmark and the centralization of hospital care into fewer hospitals (Christiansen and Vrangbaek 2018)
Fig. 3Cause-specific contributions to the gender gap in remaining time to first admission after age 60 for inpatient admissions lasting for a minimum of 2 treatment days, 1995 and 2014. Note: neoplasms: excluding sex-specific neoplasms
Fig. 4Cause-specific contributions to the gender gap in remaining years to first admission after age 60 for inpatient, outpatient and emergency admissions lasting for a minimum of 2 treatment days, 1995 and 2014. Note: neoplasms: without explicitly sex-specific neoplasms