Blakely T, Atkinson J, O'Dea D
Department of Public Health, Wellington School of Medicine, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2003 Apr;57(4):279-84. doi: 10.1136/jech.57.4.279.
To determine the association of regional income inequality within New Zealand with mortality among 25-64 year olds.
Individual census and mortality records were linked over the 1991-94 period. Income inequality (Gini coefficients) and average household income variables were calculated for 35 regions. "Individual level" variables were sex, age, ethnicity, household income, rurality, and small area socioeconomic deprivation. Logistic regression was used for the analyses. Sensitivity analyses for the level of regional aggregation were conducted.
1.4 million New Zealand census respondents aged 25-64 years followed up for mortality for three years.
Controlling for age, ethnicity, rurality, household income, and regional mean income, there was no association of income inequality with all cause mortality for either men (OR=1.007 for a 0.01 increase in the Gini, 95% confidence intervals 0.989 to 1.024) or women (OR=1.004, 0. 983 to 1.026). By cause of death (cancer, cardiovascular disease, unintentional injury, and suicide) there was some suggestion of a positive association for female unintentional injury (OR=1.068, 0.952 to 1.198) and suicide (OR=1.087, 0.957 to 1.234) but the 95% confidence intervals all included 1.0. Failure to control for ethnicity at the individual level resulted in some association of increasing regional income inequality with increasing mortality risk. Using fewer (n=14) or more (n=73) regional divisions did not substantially change the findings.
There is no convincing evidence of an association of income inequality within New Zealand with adult mortality. Previous ecological analyses within New Zealand suggesting an association of income inequality with mortality were confounded by ethnicity at the individual level. However, this study does not refute the possibility that income inequality at the national level affects health.
确定新西兰国内区域收入不平等与25至64岁人群死亡率之间的关联。
1991年至1994年期间,将个人人口普查记录与死亡率记录相链接。计算了35个地区的收入不平等(基尼系数)和家庭平均收入变量。“个体层面”变量包括性别、年龄、种族、家庭收入、农村地区以及小区域社会经济贫困程度。采用逻辑回归进行分析。对区域汇总水平进行了敏感性分析。
140万年龄在25至64岁之间的新西兰人口普查受访者,随访三年以观察死亡率情况。
在控制年龄、种族、农村地区、家庭收入和区域平均收入后,收入不平等与男性(基尼系数每增加0.01,比值比=1.007,95%置信区间为0.989至1.024)或女性(比值比=1.004,0.983至1.026)的全因死亡率均无关联。按死因(癌症、心血管疾病、意外伤害和自杀)分析,女性意外伤害(比值比=1.068,0.952至1.198)和自杀(比值比=1.087,0.957至1.234)存在一些呈正相关的迹象,但95%置信区间均包含1.0。未在个体层面控制种族因素导致区域收入不平等加剧与死亡风险增加之间存在某种关联。使用较少(n = 14)或较多(n = 73)的区域划分并未实质性改变研究结果。
没有令人信服的证据表明新西兰国内收入不平等与成年人死亡率之间存在关联。此前新西兰的生态学分析表明收入不平等与死亡率存在关联,但在个体层面受到种族因素的混淆。然而,本研究并不排除国家层面的收入不平等影响健康的可能性。