Trias-Llimós Sergi, Riffe Tim, Martín Unai
Centre d'Estudis Demogràfics, Centres de Recerca de Catalunya (CERCA), Bellaterra, Spain.
Department of Sociology and Social Work, Faculty of Social and Communication Sciences, University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Barrio Sarriena S/N, Leioa (Biscay), 48940, Spain.
BMC Public Health. 2025 Jul 17;25(1):2486. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-23661-9.
Socioeconomic inequalities in mortality give key information for public health preventive policies. We aim to assess the magnitude of educational inequalities in cause-specific mortality in Spain (2016-21).
We use mortality register and population exposure data for Spain for individuals aged 35-99 years for 2016-21. These data included information on age, sex, educational attainment, and causes of death. We estimated all-cause and age- and cause-specific mortality attributable to educational inequality (death counts, attributable fractions (AF), and years of life lost (YLL)) by treating the high education group as a counterfactual benchmark.
There were 426,449 average annual deaths in Spain in 2016-21, and we estimated 82,815 average annual deaths (42,867 males and 39,948 females) attributable to education inequality (AF of 19.5%). Deaths attributable to inequality were highly concentrated at ages 75 and over, yet the proportion of deaths attributable to educational inequality was higher at young ages (50% and 31% at ages 35-39 for males and females, respectively). Circulatory system causes of death were the leading cause in terms of deaths attributable to inequality in females (16,051 deaths, AF = 25.9%, YLL = 174,195) and the second cause in males (10,542 deaths, AF = 19.2%, YLL = 179,744). Neoplasms were the leading cause of death in males (10,868 deaths, AF = 16.1%, YLL = 230,958) but not in females (1,520 deaths, AF = 3.4%, YLL = 45,011).
Educational inequality remains a major public health challenge; its population-level impact on mortality is higher compared to the impact of smoking. Public health interventions addressing gender-specific social determinants of inequalities in health have a great potential for reducing mortality.
死亡率方面的社会经济不平等为公共卫生预防政策提供了关键信息。我们旨在评估西班牙(2016 - 2021年)特定病因死亡率方面教育不平等的程度。
我们使用了2016 - 2021年西班牙35 - 99岁人群的死亡率登记和人口暴露数据。这些数据包括年龄、性别、教育程度和死亡原因等信息。通过将高教育组作为反事实基准,我们估计了归因于教育不平等的全因死亡率以及年龄和特定病因死亡率(死亡人数、归因分数(AF)和寿命损失年数(YLL))。
2016 - 2021年西班牙平均每年有426,449例死亡,我们估计归因于教育不平等的平均每年死亡人数为82,815例(男性42,867例,女性39,948例),归因分数为19.5%。归因于不平等的死亡高度集中在75岁及以上人群,但教育不平等导致的死亡比例在年轻人中更高(35 - 39岁男性和女性分别为50%和31%)。在女性中,循环系统疾病导致的死亡是归因于不平等的主要死因(16,051例死亡,AF = 25.9%,YLL = 174,195),在男性中是第二大死因(10,542例死亡,AF = 19.2%,YLL = 179,744)。肿瘤是男性的主要死因(10,868例死亡,AF = 16.1%,YLL = 230,958),但在女性中不是主要死因(1,520例死亡,AF = 3.4%,YLL = 45,011)。
教育不平等仍然是一项重大的公共卫生挑战;与吸烟的影响相比,其在人群层面上对死亡率的影响更大。针对健康不平等中特定性别的社会决定因素的公共卫生干预措施在降低死亡率方面具有巨大潜力。