Rostad Berit, Schei Berit, Lund Nilsen Tom Ivar
Faculty of Medicine, Department of Public Health and General Practice, The Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway.
Scand J Public Health. 2009 Jun;37(4):401-8. doi: 10.1177/1403494809102777. Epub 2009 Feb 27.
To assess mortality inequalities related to education, employment and marital status in older women, and whether educational and employment inequalities can be explained by biological, health behavioural or marital factors.
Data, collected by questionnaires and medical examinations, on 5607 Norwegian women aged > or =70 participating in the population-based Nord-Trøndelag health study in 1995-97, were linked with information from the Death Registry at Statistics Norway at 31.12.2004. Cox regression model was used to estimate hazard ratios (HR) of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality related to educational level and previous employment, and to marital status.
Low level of education and never having been in paid work were significantly associated with elevated all-cause mortality. The associations remained significant upon adjustments for age, marital status, biological (systolic blood pressure, body mass index, total cholesterol) and health behavioural (smoking, physical activities) factors. Differences in cardiovascular mortality were related to low level of education and never having been in paid work, though the significant age-adjusted associations only remained significant for education upon adjustments for age, marital, biological and behavioural factors. A raised risk in cardiovascular mortality was found among women previously holding manual jobs (HR1.23, 95% CI 0.99-1.53). The graded association between education, employment and mortality showed a significant trend, except from the occupation gradient in cardiovascular mortality. Widowed and divorced women had an age-adjusted significantly raised all-cause and significant cardiovascular mortality risk compared with married women.
The socioeconomic and marital differences in mortality in older women could not be explained by biological and behavioural factors, and remains a public health issue.
评估老年女性中与教育、就业和婚姻状况相关的死亡率不平等情况,以及教育和就业不平等是否可由生物学、健康行为或婚姻因素来解释。
通过问卷调查和医学检查收集了1995 - 1997年参与基于人群的北特伦德拉格健康研究的5607名年龄≥70岁的挪威女性的数据,并将其与挪威统计局死亡登记处截至2004年12月31日的信息相联系。采用Cox回归模型来估计与教育水平、以往就业情况以及婚姻状况相关的全因死亡率和心血管死亡率的风险比(HR)。
低教育水平和从未从事过有偿工作与全因死亡率升高显著相关。在对年龄、婚姻状况、生物学因素(收缩压、体重指数、总胆固醇)和健康行为因素(吸烟、体育活动)进行调整后,这些关联仍然显著。心血管死亡率的差异与低教育水平和从未从事过有偿工作有关,不过在对年龄、婚姻、生物学和行为因素进行调整后,经年龄调整的显著关联仅在教育方面仍然显著。发现以前从事体力工作的女性心血管死亡率风险升高(HR 1.23,95%可信区间0.99 - 1.53)。除了心血管死亡率的职业梯度外,教育、就业与死亡率之间的分级关联呈现出显著趋势。与已婚女性相比,丧偶和离婚女性经年龄调整后的全因死亡率显著升高,心血管死亡率也显著升高。
老年女性死亡率中的社会经济和婚姻差异无法由生物学和行为因素来解释,仍然是一个公共卫生问题。