Centre for Economic Demography, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Ethn Health. 2011 Dec;16(6):601-23. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2011.602392. Epub 2011 Aug 1.
Previous research has demonstrated mortality differences between immigrants and natives living in Sweden. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of early life conditions in the country of birth and current socio-economic conditions in adult life in Sweden on cardiovascular, cancer, all other cause and total mortality among immigrants and natives in Sweden.
The cohort data concerning individual demographic characteristics and socio-economic conditions stems from the Swedish Longitudinal Immigrant Database (SLI), a register-based representative database, and consists of individuals from 11 countries of birth, born between 1921 and 1939, who were residents in Sweden between 1980 and 2001. The associations between current socio-economic conditions as well as infant mortality rates (IMR) and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita in the year and country of birth, and total, cardiovascular, cancer and 'all other' mortality in 1980-2001 were calculated by survival analysis using Cox proportional hazards regression to calculate hazard rate ratios.
The effects of current adult life socio-economic conditions in Sweden on mortality are both stronger and more straightforward than the effects of early life conditions in the sense that higher socio-economic status is significantly associated with lower mortality in all groups of diagnoses; however, we find associations between infant mortality rates (IMR) in the year and country of birth, and cancer mortality among men and women in the final model.
Socioeconomic conditions in Sweden are more strongly associated with mortality than early life indicators IMR and GDP per capita in the year of birth in the country of origin. This finding has health policy and other policy implications.
先前的研究表明,移民与居住在瑞典的本地人之间存在死亡率差异。本研究旨在调查出生国的早期生活条件和瑞典成年期的当前社会经济条件对移民和本地人的心血管疾病、癌症、所有其他原因和总死亡率的影响。
个体人口特征和社会经济状况的数据来源于瑞典纵向移民数据库(SLI),这是一个基于登记的代表性数据库,包含了 11 个出生国的个人,他们出生于 1921 年至 1939 年之间,在 1980 年至 2001 年期间居住在瑞典。使用 Cox 比例风险回归计算生存分析来计算当前社会经济条件以及出生年份和国家的婴儿死亡率(IMR)和人均国内生产总值(GDP)与 1980-2001 年总死亡率、心血管疾病死亡率、癌症死亡率和“所有其他”死亡率之间的关联,以计算危险率比。
瑞典当前成年期社会经济条件对死亡率的影响比早期生活条件更为强烈和直接,即较高的社会经济地位与所有诊断组的死亡率降低显著相关;然而,我们在最终模型中发现了出生年份和国家的婴儿死亡率(IMR)与男性和女性癌症死亡率之间的关联。
与出生国的出生年份的早期生活指标 IMR 和人均 GDP 相比,瑞典的社会经济条件与死亡率的相关性更强。这一发现对健康政策和其他政策具有重要意义。