Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2012 Aug;102(8):1566-71. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2011.300518. Epub 2012 Jun 14.
We investigated associations among age, race, socioeconomic status (SES), and mortality in older persons and whether low SES contributes to the Black-White mortality crossover (when elevated age-specific mortality rates invert).
We used panel data from the North Carolina Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly to test the main and interactive effects of SES on mortality.
Discrete-time hazard models showed that the association between low education and mortality did not vary by race or age and was only significant for men. For women, the effect of low income diminished with age and had little impact on the crossover. For men, low income varied by race and age, altering the Black-White crossover and producing low-high income crossovers at advanced ages.
Low education and income were associated with increased mortality risk for older adults, but only low income had a differential impact on the Black-White mortality crossover. A primary route to reducing mortality differentials in later life is to prevent the disproportionate selective mortality of Blacks and the poor earlier in the life course.
本研究旨在探讨老年人的年龄、种族、社会经济地位(SES)与死亡率之间的关系,以及 SES 水平是否会导致黑-白死亡率交叉(当特定年龄死亡率升高时,交叉发生反转)。
本研究使用北卡罗来纳州老年人流行病学研究中的固定人群面板数据,检验 SES 对死亡率的主要和交互影响。
离散时间风险模型表明,低教育程度与死亡率之间的关联不受种族或年龄的影响,仅对男性有显著影响。对于女性而言,低收入对死亡率的影响随着年龄的增长而减弱,对死亡率交叉的影响很小。对于男性,低收入因种族和年龄而异,改变了黑-白死亡率交叉,并在高龄时产生了低-高收入交叉。
低教育程度和收入与老年人的死亡率风险增加有关,但只有低收入对黑-白死亡率交叉有差异影响。减少老年人死亡率差异的主要途径是防止黑人和贫困人口在生命早期出现不成比例的选择性死亡。