Das Jyoti, Mohanty Sanjay K
International Institute for Population Sciences, Govandi Station Road, Deonar, Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400088, India.
Department of Population and Development, International Institute for Population Sciences, Govandi Station Road, Deonar, Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400088, India.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Dec 20;24(1):3546. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-20966-z.
In Low and Middle Income Countries (LMICs), reduction of multidimensional poverty and the increase in longevity are concomitant. Although a number of studies have estimated multidimensional poverty, studies on estimates of life expectancy and pre-mature mortality by multidimensional poverty are limited. We estimated life expectancy and premature mortality among multidimensionally poor and multidimensionally non-poor in India.
We have used the micro data of 636,699 households and 2,843,917 individuals from the National Family and Health Survey-5, 2019-21. We estimated multidimensional poverty in three dimensions-education, health, and standard of living using 11 indicators. Data on birth-history of women (15-49 years of age) and household-reported deaths was utilised to estimate deaths and person years and used to construct the life tables. The life tables were used to estimate life expectancy, premature mortality (the probability of dying before age 70), and adult mortality (the probability of dying between age 15-59) among multidimensionally poor and non-poor across socio-demographic characteristics..
We estimated multidimensional poverty in India at 26%, with large variation across states and union territories. Multidimensionally poor individuals had a life expectancy at birth (LEB) 4 years lower compared to multidimensionally non-poor individuals (poor: 65.2 years vs non-poor 69.0 years). The lower life expectancy of the multidimensionally poor compared to multidimensionally non-poor was found across all the sub-categories. The difference in life expectancy at birth between multidimensionally poor and non-poor was higher among urban dwellers (4.6 years) than rural individuals (1.8 years). The premature mortality was estimated at 0.33 among the multidimensionally poor and at 0.25 among the multidimensionally non-poor. Adult mortality was estimated to be 0.17 among the multidimensionally poor compared to 0.12 among the non-poor individuals. Our findings on the differences in adult mortality and premature mortality between multidimensional poor and non-poor across socio-demographic characteristics were large.
Multidimensionally poor individuals had lower longevity and higher premature mortality than their multidimensionally non-poor counterparts in India. Such differences were higher by residence (rural-urban) than by caste and religion.
在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs),多维贫困的减少与预期寿命的增加是相伴发生的。尽管有多项研究对多维贫困进行了估算,但关于多维贫困对预期寿命和过早死亡率估算的研究却很有限。我们估算了印度多维贫困人群和非多维贫困人群的预期寿命和过早死亡率。
我们使用了2019 - 2021年全国家庭健康调查-5中636,699户家庭和2,843,917个人的微观数据。我们使用11项指标从教育、健康和生活水平三个维度估算多维贫困。利用女性(15 - 49岁)的生育史数据和家庭报告的死亡数据来估算死亡人数和人年数,并用于构建生命表。生命表被用于估算不同社会人口特征的多维贫困人群和非贫困人群的预期寿命、过早死亡率(70岁前死亡的概率)和成人死亡率(15 - 59岁之间死亡的概率)。
我们估算出印度的多维贫困率为26%,各邦和联邦属地之间差异很大。多维贫困个体出生时的预期寿命(LEB)比非多维贫困个体低4岁(贫困人群:65.2岁,非贫困人群:69.0岁)。在所有子类别中,多维贫困人群的预期寿命均低于非多维贫困人群。城市居民中多维贫困人群和非多维贫困人群出生时预期寿命的差异(4.6岁)高于农村居民(1.8岁)。多维贫困人群的过早死亡率估计为0.33,非多维贫困人群为0.25。多维贫困人群的成人死亡率估计为0.17,非贫困人群为0.12。我们关于多维贫困人群和非贫困人群在不同社会人口特征下成人死亡率和过早死亡率差异的研究结果差异很大。
在印度,多维贫困个体的寿命比非多维贫困个体短,过早死亡率更高。这种差异在居住地区(农村 - 城市)方面比种姓和宗教方面更大。