Mackenbach Johan P, Karanikolos Marina, Lopez Bernal Jamie, Mckee Martin
Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC, The Netherlands
European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK ECOHOST: The Centre for Health and Social Change, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK.
Scand J Public Health. 2015 Dec;43(8):796-801. doi: 10.1177/1403494815599126. Epub 2015 Aug 10.
The upturn of life expectancy in Central and Eastern Europe in the 1990s, after a period of stagnation or even decline, is one of the main events in European population history of the late 20th century, but has not been satisfactorily explained.
Turning points in total and cause-specific mortality in the Czech Republic, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia were determined using joinpoint regression. Changes in life expectancy in the 10 years following country-specific turning points were decomposed by age and cause of death using Arriaga's method.
Among men, the turning points for all-cause mortality coincided with those for ischaemic heart disease in all six countries, and sometimes also with those for liver cirrhosis, road traffic accidents and lung cancer. Among women, the pattern was more diffuse. In the 10 years since the turning point for all-cause mortality, life expectancy increased by around four years for men and three years for women in most countries. Declines in mortality from cardiovascular disease explain between a third and a half of the increase in life expectancy in all countries, but beyond this the contributing causes of death often varied considerably.
Although the upturn of life expectancy in Central and Eastern Europe started at different points in time, improvements in prevention and/or treatment of ischaemic heart disease appear to have played a role in all six countries. Other factors, such as changes in alcohol consumption and road traffic safety, have, however, also made important contributions in some countries.
在经历了一段停滞甚至下降期后,20世纪90年代中欧和东欧地区预期寿命的回升是20世纪后期欧洲人口历史上的主要事件之一,但尚未得到令人满意的解释。
使用连接点回归确定捷克共和国、保加利亚、匈牙利、波兰、罗马尼亚和斯洛伐克的全因死亡率及特定病因死亡率的转折点。采用阿里亚加方法按年龄和死因分解特定国家转折点后10年预期寿命的变化。
在男性中,所有六个国家的全因死亡率转折点与缺血性心脏病的转折点一致,有时也与肝硬化、道路交通事故和肺癌的转折点一致。在女性中,模式更为分散。在全因死亡率转折点后的10年里,大多数国家男性的预期寿命增加了约4岁,女性增加了约3岁。心血管疾病死亡率的下降在所有国家预期寿命增加中占三分之一到一半,但除此之外,导致预期寿命增加的死因往往差异很大。
尽管中欧和东欧地区预期寿命的回升始于不同时间点,但缺血性心脏病预防和/或治疗的改善似乎在所有六个国家都发挥了作用。然而,其他因素,如酒精消费的变化和道路交通安全,在一些国家也做出了重要贡献。