Bennett James E, Li Guangquan, Foreman Kyle, Best Nicky, Kontis Vasilis, Pearson Clare, Hambly Peter, Ezzati Majid
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, and MRC-PHE Centre for Environment and Health, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, and MRC-PHE Centre for Environment and Health, Imperial College London, London, UK; Department of Mathematics and Information Sciences, Northumbria University, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK.
Lancet. 2015 Jul 11;386(9989):163-70. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)60296-3. Epub 2015 Apr 29.
To plan for pensions and health and social services, future mortality and life expectancy need to be forecast. Consistent forecasts for all subnational units within a country are very rare. Our aim was to forecast mortality and life expectancy for England and Wales' districts.
We developed Bayesian spatiotemporal models for forecasting of age-specific mortality and life expectancy at a local, small-area level. The models included components that accounted for mortality in relation to age, birth cohort, time, and space. We used geocoded mortality and population data between 1981 and 2012 from the Office for National Statistics together with the model with the smallest error to forecast age-specific death rates and life expectancy to 2030 for 375 of England and Wales' 376 districts. We measured model performance by withholding recent data and comparing forecasts with this withheld data.
Life expectancy at birth in England and Wales was 79·5 years (95% credible interval 79·5-79·6) for men and 83·3 years (83·3-83·4) for women in 2012. District life expectancies ranged between 75·2 years (74·9-75·6) and 83·4 years (82·1-84·8) for men and between 80·2 years (79·8-80·5) and 87·3 years (86·0-88·8) for women. Between 1981 and 2012, life expectancy increased by 8·2 years for men and 6·0 years for women, closing the female-male gap from 6·0 to 3·8 years. National life expectancy in 2030 is expected to reach 85·7 (84·2-87·4) years for men and 87·6 (86·7-88·9) years for women, further reducing the female advantage to 1·9 years. Life expectancy will reach or surpass 81·4 years for men and reach or surpass 84·5 years for women in every district by 2030. Longevity inequality across districts, measured as the difference between the 1st and 99th percentiles of district life expectancies, has risen since 1981, and is forecast to rise steadily to 8·3 years (6·8-9·7) for men and 8·3 years (7·1-9·4) for women by 2030.
Present forecasts underestimate the expected rise in life expectancy, especially for men, and hence the need to provide improved health and social services and pensions for elderly people in England and Wales. Health and social policies are needed to curb widening life expectancy inequalities, help deprived districts catch up in longevity gains, and avoid a so-called grand divergence in health and longevity.
UK Medical Research Council and Public Health England.
为规划养老金以及健康和社会服务,需要预测未来的死亡率和预期寿命。对一个国家内所有次国家级单位进行一致的预测非常少见。我们的目标是预测英格兰和威尔士各地区的死亡率和预期寿命。
我们开发了贝叶斯时空模型,用于在地方小区域层面预测特定年龄的死亡率和预期寿命。这些模型包含了与年龄、出生队列、时间和空间相关的死亡率组成部分。我们使用了英国国家统计局1981年至2012年的地理编码死亡率和人口数据,以及误差最小的模型,来预测英格兰和威尔士376个地区中375个地区到2030年的特定年龄死亡率和预期寿命。我们通过保留近期数据并将预测结果与这些保留数据进行比较来衡量模型性能。
2012年,英格兰和威尔士男性出生时的预期寿命为79.5岁(95%可信区间为79.5 - 79.6),女性为83.3岁(83.3 - 83.4)。各地区男性预期寿命在75.2岁(74.9 - 75.6)至83.4岁(82.1 - 84.8)之间,女性在80.2岁(79.8 - 80.5)至87.3岁(86.0 - 88.8)之间。1981年至2012年期间,男性预期寿命增加了8.2岁,女性增加了6.0岁,男女预期寿命差距从6.0岁缩小至3.8岁。预计到2030年,英国男性预期寿命将达到85.7岁(84.2 - 87.4),女性将达到87.6岁(86.7 - 88.9),女性优势进一步缩小至1.9岁。到2030年,每个地区男性预期寿命将达到或超过81.4岁,女性将达到或超过84.5岁。自1981年以来,各地区预期寿命不平等(以地区预期寿命第1百分位数和第99百分位数之差衡量)有所上升,预计到2030年将稳步上升至男性8.3岁(6.8 - 9.7),女性8.3岁(7.1 - 9.4)。
目前的预测低估了预期寿命的预期增长,尤其是男性的预期寿命增长,因此需要为英格兰和威尔士的老年人提供更好的健康和社会服务以及养老金。需要制定健康和社会政策来遏制预期寿命不平等的扩大,帮助贫困地区在预期寿命增长方面迎头赶上,并避免健康和寿命方面出现所谓的巨大差异。
英国医学研究理事会和英国公共卫生部。