Tarkiainen Lasse, Martikainen Pekka, Laaksonen Mikko
Population Research Unit, Department of Social Research, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Finnish Centre for Pensions, Research Department, Helsinki, Finland.
Addiction. 2016 Mar;111(3):456-64. doi: 10.1111/add.13211. Epub 2015 Nov 27.
First, to quantify trends in the contribution of alcohol-related mortality to mortality disparity in Finland by income quintiles. Secondly, to estimate the degree to which education, social class and economic activity explain the income-mortality association in alcohol-related and other mortality in four periods within 1988-2012.
Register-based longitudinal study using an 11% random sample of Finnish residents linked to socio-economic and mortality data in 1988-2012 augmented with an 80% sample of all deaths during 1988-2007. Mortality rates and discrete time survival regression models were used to assess the income-mortality association following adjustment for covariates in 6-year periods after baseline years of 1988, 1994, 2001, and 2007.
Finland.
Individuals aged 35-64 years at baselines. For the four study periods for men/women, the final data set comprised, respectively, 26,360/12,825, 22,561/11,423, 20,342/11,319 and 2651/1514 deaths attributable to other causes and 7517/1217, 8199/1450, 9807/2116, 1431/318 deaths attributable to alcohol-related causes.
Alcohol-related deaths were analysed with household income, education, social class and economic activity as covariates.
The income disparity in mortality originated increasingly from alcohol-related causes of death, in the lowest quintile the contribution increasing from 28 to 49% among men and from 11 to 28% among women between periods 1988-93 and 2007-12. Among men, socio-economic characteristics attenuated the excess mortality during each study period in the lowest income quintile by 51-62% in alcohol-related and other causes. Among women, in the lowest quintile the attenuation was 47-76% in other causes, but there was a decreasing tendency in the proportion explained by the covariates in alcohol-related mortality.
The income disparity in mortality among working-age Finns originates increasingly from alcohol-related causes of death. Roughly half the excess mortality in the lowest income quintile during 2007-12 is explained by the covariates of household income, education, social class and economic activity.
第一,按收入五分位数量化芬兰酒精相关死亡率对死亡率差距的贡献趋势。第二,估计教育、社会阶层和经济活动在多大程度上解释了1988年至2012年四个时期内酒精相关死亡率和其他死亡率中的收入与死亡率之间的关联。
基于登记的纵向研究,使用芬兰居民11%的随机样本,并将其与1988年至2012年的社会经济和死亡率数据相链接,同时增加了1988年至2007年期间所有死亡病例80%的样本。死亡率和离散时间生存回归模型用于评估在1988年、1994年、2001年和2007年这些基线年份之后的6年期间,在对协变量进行调整后收入与死亡率之间的关联。
芬兰。
基线时年龄在35至64岁之间的个体。对于男性/女性的四个研究时期,最终数据集分别包括26360/12825、22561/11423、20342/11319和2651/1514例归因于其他原因的死亡,以及7517/1217、8199/1450、9807/2116、1431/318例归因于酒精相关原因的死亡。
以家庭收入、教育、社会阶层和经济活动作为协变量,对酒精相关死亡进行分析。
死亡率的收入差距越来越多地源于酒精相关的死亡原因,在最低五分位数中,1988 - 1993年至2007 - 2012年期间,男性的贡献从28%增加到49%,女性从11%增加到28%。在男性中,社会经济特征使最低收入五分位数在每个研究时期因酒精相关和其他原因导致的超额死亡率降低了51% - 62%。在女性中,最低五分位数中其他原因导致的超额死亡率降低了47% - 76%,但协变量在酒精相关死亡率中所解释的比例呈下降趋势。
芬兰劳动年龄人群中死亡率的收入差距越来越多地源于酒精相关的死亡原因。2007 - 2012年期间,最低收入五分位数中约一半的超额死亡率可由家庭收入、教育、社会阶层和经济活动这些协变量来解释。