Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Kobenhavn, Denmark
Department of Public Health Sciences, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jun 29;11(6):e048192. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-048192.
Levels, trends or changes in socioeconomic mortality differentials are typically described in terms of means, for example, life expectancies, but studies have suggested that there also are systematic social disparities in the dispersion around those means, in other words there are inequalities in lifespan variation. This study investigates changes in income inequalities in mean and distributional measures of mortality in Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden over two decades.
Nationwide register-based study.
The Danish, Finnish, Norwegian and Swedish populations aged 30 years or over in 1997 and 2017.
Income-specific changes in life expectancy, lifespan variation and the contribution of 'early' and 'late' deaths to increasing life expectancy.
Increases in life expectancy has taken place in all four countries, but there are systematic differences across income groups. In general, the largest gains in life expectancy were observed in Denmark, and the smallest increase among low-income women in Sweden and Norway. Overall, life expectancy increased and lifespan variation decreased with increasing income level. These differences grew larger over time. In all countries, a marked postponement of early deaths led to a compression of mortality in the top three income quartiles for both genders. This did not occur for the lowest income quartile.
Increasing life expectancy is typically accompanied by postponement of early deaths and reduction of lifespan inequality in the higher-income groups. However, Nordic welfare societies are challenged by the fact that postponing premature deaths among people in the lowest-income groups is not taking place.
通常情况下,社会经济死亡率差异的水平、趋势或变化是用均值来描述的,例如预期寿命,但研究表明,在这些均值的离散度方面也存在系统性的社会差距,换句话说,在寿命变化方面存在不平等。本研究调查了丹麦、芬兰、挪威和瑞典在过去二十年中,平均和分布死亡率的收入不平等程度的变化。
基于全国范围的登记研究。
1997 年和 2017 年年龄在 30 岁及以上的丹麦、芬兰、挪威和瑞典人群。
预期寿命、寿命变化以及“早逝”和“晚逝”对预期寿命增长的贡献在收入方面的变化。
所有四个国家的预期寿命都有所增加,但收入群体之间存在系统性差异。总的来说,丹麦的预期寿命增长幅度最大,而瑞典和挪威的低收入女性的预期寿命增长幅度最小。总体而言,随着收入水平的提高,预期寿命增加,寿命变化减少。这些差异随着时间的推移而增大。在所有国家,早期死亡的明显推迟导致男女两性中前三个收入四分位数的死亡率压缩。对于最低收入四分位数,这种情况并未发生。
预期寿命的增加通常伴随着早期死亡的推迟和高收入群体寿命不平等的减少。然而,北欧福利社会面临的挑战是,最低收入群体中过早死亡的推迟并没有发生。