Tanaka Hirokazu, Toyokawa Satoshi, Tamiya Nanako, Takahashi Hideto, Noguchi Haruko, Kobayashi Yasuki
Department of Public Health, Graduate School of Medicine, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Health Services Research, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan.
BMJ Open. 2017 Sep 5;7(9):e015764. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-015764.
Changes in mortality inequalities across socioeconomic groups have been a substantial public health concern worldwide. We investigated changes in absolute/relative mortality inequalities across occupations, and the contribution of different diseases to inequalities in tandem with the restructuring of the Japanese economy.
Using complete Japanese national death registries from 5 year intervals (1980-2010), all cause and cause specific age standardised mortality rates (ASMR per 100 000 people standardised using the Japanese standard population in 1985, aged 30-59 years) across 12 occupations were computed. Absolute and relative inequalities were measured in ASMR differences (RDs) and ASMR ratios (RRs) among occupations in comparison with manufacturing workers (reference). We also estimated the changing contribution of different diseases by calculating the differences in ASMR change between 1995 and 2010 for occupations and reference.
All cause ASMRs tended to decrease in both sexes over the three decades except for male managers (increased by 71% points, 1995-2010). RDs across occupations were reduced for both sexes (civil servants 233.5 to -1.9 for men; sales workers 63.3 to 4.5 for women) but RRs increased for some occupations (professional workers 1.38 to 1.70; service workers 2.35 to 3.73) for men and decreased for women from 1980 to 2010. Male relative inequalities widened among farmer, fishery and service workers, because the percentage declines were smaller in these occupations. Cerebrovascular disease and cancer were the main causes of the decrease in mortality inequalities among sexes but the incidence of suicide increased among men, thereby increasing sex related inequalities.
Absolute inequality trends in mortality across occupations decreased in both sexes, while relative inequality trends were heterogeneous in Japan. The main drivers of narrowing and widening mortality inequalities were cerebrovascular disease and suicide, respectively. Future public health efforts will benefit from eliminating residual inequalities in mortality by considering the contribution of the causes of death and socioeconomic status stratification.
社会经济群体间死亡率不平等的变化一直是全球重大的公共卫生问题。我们调查了不同职业间绝对/相对死亡率不平等的变化,以及不同疾病对不平等的影响,并结合日本经济结构调整进行研究。
利用日本每隔5年(1980 - 2010年)的完整全国死亡登记数据,计算了12种职业的全因及特定病因年龄标准化死亡率(每10万人的年龄标准化死亡率,采用1985年日本标准人口进行标准化,年龄范围为30 - 59岁)。通过比较制造业工人(参照组),以年龄标准化死亡率差异(RDs)和年龄标准化死亡率比值(RRs)衡量各职业间的绝对和相对不平等。我们还通过计算1995年至2010年各职业与参照组年龄标准化死亡率变化的差异,来估计不同疾病贡献的变化。
在这三十年中,除男性管理人员外(1995 - 2010年增加了71个百分点),两性的全因年龄标准化死亡率均呈下降趋势。各职业间的RDs在两性中均有所降低(男性公务员从233.5降至 - 1.9;女性销售人员从63.3降至4.5),但RRs在某些职业中有所增加(男性专业人员从1.38增至1.70;服务人员从2.35增至3.73),而女性的RRs在1980年至2010年有所下降。男性农民、渔业和服务业工人中的相对不平等有所扩大,因为这些职业的死亡率下降百分比较小。脑血管疾病和癌症是两性死亡率不平等下降的主要原因,但男性自杀率上升,从而加剧了性别相关的不平等。
两性各职业间死亡率的绝对不平等趋势下降,而相对不平等趋势在日本则各不相同。死亡率不平等缩小和扩大的主要驱动因素分别是脑血管疾病和自杀。未来的公共卫生工作将受益于通过考虑死亡原因和社会经济地位分层的贡献来消除死亡率方面的残余不平等。