Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute, KNAW/University of Groningen, The Hague, The Netherlands
Social Medicine, Amsterdam UMC - Locatie AMC, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2024 Aug 9;78(9):561-569. doi: 10.1136/jech-2023-221702.
Socioeconomic mortality inequalities are persistent in Europe but have been changing over time. Smoking is a known contributor to inequality levels, but knowledge about its impact on time trends in inequalities is sparse.
We studied trends in educational inequalities in smoking-attributable mortality (SAM) and assessed their impact on general mortality inequality trends in England and Wales (E&W), Finland, and Italy (Turin) from 1972 to 2017. We used yearly individually linked all-cause and lung cancer mortality data by educational level and sex for individuals aged 30 and older. SAM was indirectly estimated using the Preston-Glei-Wilmoth method. We calculated the slope index of inequality (SII) and performed segmented regression on SIIs for all-cause, smoking and non-SAM to identify phases in inequality trends. The impact of SAM on all-cause mortality inequality trends was estimated by comparing changes in SII for all-cause with non-SAM.
Inequalities in SAM generally declined among males and increased among females, except in Italy. Among males in E&W and Finland, SAM contributed 93% and 76% to declining absolute all-cause mortality inequalities, but this contribution varied over time. Among males in Italy, SAM drove the 1976-1992 increase in all-cause mortality inequalities. Among females in Finland, increasing inequalities in SAM hampered larger declines in mortality inequalities.
Our findings demonstrate that differing education-specific SAM trends by country and sex result in different inequality trends, and consequent contributions of SAM on educational mortality inequalities. The following decades of the smoking epidemic could increase educational mortality inequalities among Finnish and Italian women.
社会经济地位与死亡率之间的不平等在欧洲长期存在,但这种不平等状况随时间推移而发生了变化。吸烟是导致不平等水平的一个已知因素,但关于吸烟对不平等趋势的影响的知识还很匮乏。
我们研究了教育不平等与归因于吸烟的死亡率(SAM)之间的趋势,并评估了其对英格兰和威尔士(英格兰和威尔士)、芬兰和意大利(都灵) 1972 年至 2017 年期间一般死亡率不平等趋势的影响。我们使用了按教育程度和性别划分的每年个人关联的全因和肺癌死亡率数据。通过普雷斯顿-盖勒-威尔莫特方法间接估计 SAM。我们计算了不平等斜率指数(SII),并对全因、吸烟和非 SAM 的 SII 进行分段回归,以确定不平等趋势的阶段。通过比较全因与非 SAM 的 SII 变化,估计了 SAM 对全因死亡率不平等趋势的影响。
除意大利外,SAM 导致男性中的不平等现象普遍下降,而女性中的不平等现象则增加。在英格兰和芬兰的男性中,SAM 对全因死亡率不平等程度的下降贡献了 93%和 76%,但这种贡献随时间而变化。在意大利的男性中,SAM 推动了 1976 年至 1992 年全因死亡率不平等的增加。在芬兰的女性中,SAM 导致的不平等增加阻碍了死亡率不平等的更大下降。
我们的研究结果表明,由于国家和性别不同,SAM 存在不同的特定教育趋势,从而导致不平等状况不同,以及 SAM 对教育相关死亡率不平等的相应影响。吸烟流行的未来几十年可能会增加芬兰和意大利女性的教育相关死亡率不平等。