Historical and life course timing of the male mortality disadvantage in Europe: epidemiologic transitions, evolution, and behavior.

Margaret M Weden, Ryan A Brown
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

This study employs vital statistics data from Sweden, England, Wales, France, and Spain to examine male:female mortality differentials from 1750 through 2000 and their interrelationship with epidemiological transitions. Across all ages and time periods, the largest relative mortality disadvantages are to young adult men. When crisis mortality from the two world wars is removed, we show that the mortality in this young male age group is about two to three times the level of female mortality across all countries sampled. In addition, we show that the timing of this stabilization in male mortality disadvantages occurs during the last half of the twentieth century, at the same point that our measure of epidemiological change also stabilizes at a new low level. The findings are consistent with an interdisciplinary theoretical model that links social, technological and epidemiological changes that occurred through the first half of the 20th century with the unmasking and accentuation of mortality disadvantages among young adult men.

欧洲男性死亡率劣势的历史和生命历程时间:流行病学转变、演变和行为。
本研究使用来自瑞典、英格兰、威尔士、法国和西班牙的生命统计数据来检验1750年至2000年间男女死亡率的差异及其与流行病学转变的相互关系。在所有年龄段和时期,相对死亡率最大的劣势是年轻成年男子。当两次世界大战造成的危机死亡率被剔除后,我们发现,在所有抽样国家中,这个年轻男性年龄组的死亡率大约是女性死亡率的两到三倍。此外,我们表明,男性死亡率劣势稳定的时间发生在20世纪后半叶,与此同时,我们对流行病学变化的测量也稳定在一个新的低水平。这些发现与一个跨学科的理论模型相一致,该模型将20世纪上半叶发生的社会、技术和流行病学变化与年轻成年男性死亡率劣势的暴露和加剧联系起来。
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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