Multimorbid life expectancy across race, socio-economic status, and sex in South Africa.

Anastasia Lam, Katherine Keenan, Mikko Myrskylä, H. Kulu
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Abstract

Multimorbidity is increasing globally as populations age. However, it is unclear how long individuals live with multimorbidity and how it varies by social and economic factors. We investigate this in South Africa, whose apartheid history further complicates race, socio-economic, and sex inequalities. We introduce the term 'multimorbid life expectancy' (MMLE) to describe the years lived with multimorbidity. Using data from the South African National Income Dynamics Study (2008-17) and incidence-based multistate Markov modelling, we find that females experience higher MMLE than males (17.3 vs 9.8 years), and this disparity is consistent across all race and education groups. MMLE is highest among Asian/Indian people and the post-secondary educated relative to other groups and lowest among African people. These findings suggest there are associations between structural inequalities and MMLE, highlighting the need for health-system and educational policies to be implemented in a way proportional to each group's level of need.
南非不同种族、社会经济地位和性别的多病预期寿命。
随着人口老龄化的加剧,全球范围内的多病症发病率也在不断上升。然而,目前还不清楚个人在多病症的情况下能活多久,也不清楚社会和经济因素对多病症的影响有多大。我们在南非对这一问题进行了调查,南非的种族隔离历史使种族、社会经济和性别不平等更加复杂。我们引入了 "多病预期寿命"(MMLE)一词来描述多病生存年数。利用南非国民收入动态研究(2008-17 年)的数据和基于发病率的多态马尔可夫模型,我们发现女性的多病预期寿命高于男性(17.3 年对 9.8 年),而且这种差异在所有种族和教育群体中都是一致的。相对于其他群体,亚裔/印第安人和受过高等教育的人的 MMLE 最高,而非洲人最低。这些研究结果表明,结构性不平等与 MMLE 之间存在关联,突出表明需要根据每个群体的需求水平来实施卫生系统和教育政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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