Avendano Mauricio, Moustgaard Heta, Martikainen Pekka
Department of Global Health & Social Medicine, King's College London, East Wing, Strand Campus, Strand, London, WC2R 2LS, UK.
Department Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public health, Boston, MA, USA.
Eur J Epidemiol. 2017 Jan;32(1):77-85. doi: 10.1007/s10654-016-0152-8. Epub 2016 Oct 11.
This paper uses individual-level longitudinal data on working-age Finns to examine the health effects of economic fluctuations during a period of economic decline (1989-1996) and recovery (1997-2007) in Finland. We used a nationally representative, longitudinal sample formed by linking population, employment and mortality registers (n = 698,484; 7,719,870 person-years). We implemented a region fixed-effect model that exploits within-regional variations over time in the unemployment rate to identify the effect of economic fluctuations on mortality, controlling for individual employment transitions. Unemployment rates increased from 5.2 % in 1989 to 19.8 % in 1996, declining gradually thereafter and reaching 9.7 % in 2007. Results indicate that these large fluctuations in the economy had no impact on the overall mortality of most working age Finns. The exception was highly educated men, who experienced an increase of 7 % (Rate ratio = 1.07, 95 % confidence interval 1.04, 1.10) for every one-point increase in the regional unemployment rate during the period 1989-1996 due to increased mortality from cardiovascular disease and suicide. This increase, however, was not robust in models that used the employment to population ratio as measure of the economy. Unemployment rates were unrelated to mortality among females, lower educated men, and among any group during economic recovery (1997-2007). For most Finns, we found no consistent evidence of changes in mortality in response to contractions or expansions in the economy. Possible explanations include the weak impact of the recession on wages, as well as the generous unemployment insurance and social benefit system in Finland.
本文使用芬兰劳动年龄人口的个体层面纵向数据,研究芬兰经济衰退期(1989 - 1996年)和复苏期(1997 - 2007年)经济波动对健康的影响。我们使用了一个具有全国代表性的纵向样本,该样本通过链接人口、就业和死亡登记册形成(n = 698,484;7,719,870人年)。我们实施了一个区域固定效应模型,该模型利用失业率随时间在区域内的变化来确定经济波动对死亡率的影响,同时控制个体就业转变情况。失业率从1989年的5.2%上升到1996年的19.8%,此后逐渐下降,到2007年降至9.7%。结果表明,这些经济上的大幅波动对大多数劳动年龄芬兰人的总体死亡率没有影响。例外的是受过高等教育的男性,在1989 - 1996年期间,区域失业率每上升一个百分点,他们因心血管疾病和自杀导致的死亡率上升7%(率比 = 1.07,95%置信区间1.04,1.10)。然而,在使用就业人口比率作为经济衡量指标的模型中,这种上升并不稳健。在经济复苏期(1997 - 2007年),失业率与女性、受教育程度较低的男性以及任何群体的死亡率均无关联。对于大多数芬兰人,我们没有发现经济收缩或扩张导致死亡率变化的一致证据。可能的解释包括衰退对工资的影响较弱,以及芬兰慷慨的失业保险和社会福利制度。