欧盟扩大后,东西方预期寿命差距正在缩小吗?

IF 1.5 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY
Domantas Jasilionis, France Meslé, Jacques Vallin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1990年柏林墙的倒塌和2004年欧盟的扩大是中欧和东欧地区近代史上的两大政治事件。本文通过系统比较中欧和东欧七个新成员国与欧盟15个更先进国家出生时预期寿命的变化和差异,试图找出2004年欧盟扩大前后健康趋同进程中的先行者和落后者。分解分析的结果突出了年龄和特定原因对预期寿命差异的贡献模式的变化。最后,我们重点讨论在减少心血管疾病负担和外部死亡原因方面取得进展的不同情况,众所周知,这些疾病是造成共产主义统治时期长期死亡率危机的原因。我们的研究结果表明,共产主义政权的崩溃导致中欧国家立即发生积极变化。与此同时,在波罗的海国家,保健方面的不利条件持续存在,甚至恶化。后来,2004年加入欧盟并没有立即带来预期寿命的系统性趋同。然而,在2007年之后,特别是2010年代,最初表现最差的波罗的海国家取得了非常迅速的进展,这可能表明欧盟扩大的积极影响推迟了,导致长寿劣势的减少。2004年之后,在最初表现较好的四个中欧国家,趋同进程普遍较慢。尽管存在这些国别差异,但捷克、波兰,特别是爱沙尼亚,仍然是该地区明显的卫生先锋。进一步的进展需要更系统的努力来防治心血管疾病和成年工作年龄男性死亡率过高这一持续存在的负担。*本文属于“社会主义国家转型前后东欧和西欧人口发展”特刊。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Is East-West Life Expectancy Gap Narrowing in the Enlarged European Union?
The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1990 and EU enlargement in 2004 are two major political events in the recent history of the Central and Eastern European region. By systematically comparing the changes and differences in life expectancy at birth between the seven new member countries from Central and Eastern Europe and more advanced countries of the EU-15, this article attempts to identify the vanguards and laggards in the health convergence process before and after the 2004 EU enlargement. The results of decomposition analysis highlight the changing patterns of age- and cause-specific contributions to the differences in life expectancy. Finally, we focus on the variations in the progress in reducing the burden of cardiovascular diseases and external causes of death, which were known to be responsible for the long-term mortality crisis during the period of communist rule. Our findings suggest that the collapse of the communist regimes led to immediate positive changes in the Central European countries. At the same time, health disadvantages persisted and even worsened in the Baltic countries. Later on, joining the EU in 2004 was not accompanied by immediate systematic convergence of life expectancy. However, very rapid progress in the initially worst performing Baltic countries after 2007 and especially during the 2010s, may suggest a delayed positive impact of EU enlargement leading to decreasing longevity disadvantage. The convergence process after 2004 was generally slower in the initially better-performing four Central European countries. Despite these country-specific variations, Czechia, Poland, and, especially, Estonia remain clear health vanguards in the region. Further progress requires much more systematic efforts to combat cardiovascular diseases and the persisting burden of excess male mortality at adult working ages. * This article belongs to a special issue on “Demographic Developments in Eastern and Western Europe Before and After the Transformation of Socialist Countries”.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
26 weeks
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