Kondo Naoki, Rostila Mikael, Yngwe Monica Åberg
School of Public Health, The University of Tokyo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Sociology, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden Centre for Health Equity Studies, Stockholm University/Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2014 Dec;68(12):1145-50. doi: 10.1136/jech-2013-203619. Epub 2014 Aug 20.
In the past two decades, health inequality has persisted or increased in states with comprehensive welfare.
We conducted a national registry-based repeated cohort study with a 3-year follow-up between 1990 and 2007 in Sweden. Information on all-cause mortality in all working-age Swedish men and women aged between 30 and 64 years was collected. Data were subjected to temporal trend analysis using joinpoint regression to statistically confirm the trajectories observed.
Among men, age-standardised mortality rate decreased by 38.3% from 234.9 to 145 (per 100 000 population) over the whole period in the highest income quintile, whereas the reduction was only 18.3% (from 774.5 to 632.5) in the lowest quintile. Among women, mortality decreased by 40% (from 187.4 to 112.5) in the highest income group, but increased by 12.1% (from 280.2 to 314.2) in the poorest income group. Joinpoint regression identified that the differences in age-standardised mortality between the highest and the lowest income quintiles decreased among men by 18.85 annually between 1990 and 1994 (p trend=0.02), whereas it increased later, with a 2.88 point increase per year (p trend <0.0001). Among women, it continuously increased by 9.26/year (p trend <0.0001). In relative terms, age-adjusted mortality rate ratios showed a continuous increase in both genders.
Income-based inequalities among working-age male and female Swedes have increased since the late 1990s, whereas in absolute terms the increase was less remarkable among men. Structural and behavioural factors explaining this trend, such as the economic recession in the early 1990s, should be studied further.
在过去二十年中,拥有全面福利制度的国家中,健康不平等现象持续存在或有所加剧。
我们在瑞典开展了一项基于全国登记系统的重复队列研究,随访期为1990年至2007年的3年。收集了瑞典所有年龄在30至64岁之间的在职男女的全因死亡率信息。使用连接点回归对数据进行时间趋势分析,以统计学方式确认观察到的轨迹。
在男性中,最高收入五分位数组的年龄标准化死亡率在整个时期内从每10万人口234.9降至145,降幅为38.3%,而最低五分位数组的降幅仅为18.3%(从774.5降至632.5)。在女性中,最高收入组的死亡率下降了40%(从187.4降至112.5),但最贫困收入组的死亡率上升了12.1%(从280.2升至314.2)。连接点回归表明,1990年至1994年间,男性中最高和最低收入五分位数组之间的年龄标准化死亡率差异每年下降18.85(p趋势=0.02),而后来有所增加,每年增加2.88个百分点(p趋势<0.0001)。在女性中,该差异每年持续增加9.26(p趋势<0.0001)。相对而言,年龄调整后的死亡率比值在两性中均持续上升。
自20世纪90年代末以来,瑞典在职男女基于收入的不平等现象有所增加,而从绝对数值来看,男性中的增加不太显著。应进一步研究解释这一趋势的结构和行为因素,如20世纪90年代初的经济衰退。