Zvidriņs P, Krumiņs J
Department of Statistics and Demography, University of Latvia, Riga.
Scand J Soc Med. 1993 Sep;21(3):150-8. doi: 10.1177/140349489302100303.
The purpose of the present study was to examine the general morbidity and mortality rates in the three Baltic republics--Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania during a decade before the collapse of the Soviet Union. Official statistical data were used to compare morbidity and mortality rates. A method of standardization and life table functions were employed. Soviet morbidity statistics were predominantly descriptive, and based mainly on crude rates registered cases of illness during a year per 100,000 population. The death rates during the Soviet period are a better indicator of the health of the populations than more specific health indicators. A general deterioration of the ecological, social and economic situation in the Baltic republics at the end of the 1980s and early 1990s may have resulted in the mortality rising and aborted any trends to increasing life expectancy in the next few years thus requiring more radical reforms in health and social policy. The study demonstrates a noticeable difference in mortality rates between demographic and socio-economic groups in the Baltic states.
本研究的目的是调查苏联解体前十年间波罗的海三国——爱沙尼亚、拉脱维亚和立陶宛的总体发病率和死亡率。使用官方统计数据来比较发病率和死亡率。采用了标准化方法和生命表函数。苏联的发病率统计主要是描述性的,主要基于每10万人口中每年登记的疾病粗发病率。苏联时期的死亡率比更具体的健康指标更能反映人口的健康状况。20世纪80年代末和90年代初波罗的海三国生态、社会和经济状况的普遍恶化可能导致了死亡率上升,并中止了未来几年预期寿命增加的任何趋势,因此需要在卫生和社会政策方面进行更彻底的改革。该研究表明,波罗的海国家不同人口和社会经济群体之间的死亡率存在显著差异。