过早死亡的全球差异。

IF 11.3 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Omar Karlsson, Dean T Jamison, Gavin Yamey, Sarah Bolongaita, Wenhui Mao, Angela Y Chang, Ole F Norheim, Osondu Ogbuoji, Stéphane Verguet
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引用次数: 0

摘要

重要性:各国之间死亡率的持续差异表明生活水平的改善和获得延长生命的保健技术的机会不平衡,以及具体情况的障碍。研究分析了死亡率方面的跨国不平等,但没有将这些差异广泛地置于发展进步的背景下,考虑到在广泛获得增进健康的最佳技术和现有生活水平的情况下所能达到的死亡率水平。目的:研究不同国家和地区的过早死亡(PPD)概率(定义为70岁前死亡的概率),基准进展为落后最低国家水平PPD(前沿)的年份。设计和设置:本横断面研究使用来自2024年联合国世界人口前景和人类死亡率数据库的总体数据来计算全球7个地区和30个人口最多的国家的PPD。数据分析时间为2025年5月至9月。主要结局和措施:主要结局是PPD和落后最低国家水平PPD的年数。结果:边疆PPD从1900年的57%下降到2019年的12%。撒哈拉以南非洲地区2019年的PPD为52%,与1916年的前沿PPD相对应。然而,自2000年以来,撒哈拉以南非洲地区已经向前沿靠拢了40多年,当时该地区的PPD为65%。自1970年以来,中国一直在向前沿靠拢,1970年的PPD落后前沿93年(PPD为60%),2019年落后35年(PPD为21%)。美国已经偏离了前沿,在1970年落后29年(PPD为38%),在2019年落后38年(PPD为22%)。在所包括的地区中,北大西洋(西欧和加拿大)最接近前沿,在2019年落后13年(PPD为15%)。美国、中欧和东欧以及撒哈拉以南非洲地区的PPD高于2019年普雷斯顿曲线(即,他们的PPD高于人均国内生产总值预测)。结论和相关性:在这项横断面研究中,PPD的差异可能反映了在获得促进健康的技术和生活水平方面的主要不平等,以及具体情况的障碍。必须迅速和公平地传播导致普遍健康惠益的技术和医学进步。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Global Disparities in Premature Mortality.

Importance: Persistent disparities in mortality across countries suggest uneven improvements in living standards and access to life-extending health technologies, as well as context-specific obstacles. Studies have analyzed cross-country inequality in mortality but have not widely contextualized those disparities in terms of developmental progress relative to a frontier representing a level of mortality achievable with broad access to the best health-enhancing technology and living standards available.

Objective: To examine probability of premature death (PPD)-defined as probability of dying before 70 years of age-across countries and regions, benchmarking progress as years behind the lowest country-level PPD (the frontier).

Design and setting: This cross-sectional study used aggregate-level data from the 2024 United Nations World Population Prospects and Human Mortality Database to calculate PPD across 7 global regions and the 30 most populous countries. Data were analyzed from May to September 2025.

Main outcome and measures: The primary outcomes were PPD and the number of years behind the lowest country-level PPD.

Results: The frontier PPD fell from 57% to 12% from 1900 to 2019. Sub-Saharan Africa's PPD in 2019 was 52%, corresponding to the 1916 frontier PPD. However, sub-Saharan Africa had converged toward the frontier by over 40 years since 2000, when it had a 65% PPD. China has been converging toward the frontier since 1970, having been 93 years behind the frontier PPD in 1970 (with a 60% PPD) and 35 years behind in 2019 (21% PPD). The US has diverged away from the frontier, having been 29 years behind in 1970 (38% PPD) and 38 years in 2019 (22% PPD). Of the regions included, the North Atlantic (Western Europe and Canada) was the closest to the frontier, being 13 years behind in 2019 (15% PPD). The US, Central and Eastern Europe, and sub-Saharan Africa were the furthest above the 2019 PPD Preston curve (ie, they had a greater PPD than predicted by their per capita gross domestic product).

Conclusions and relevance: In this cross-sectional study, disparities in PPD were likely to reflect major inequality in access to health-enhancing technologies and living standards, as well as context-specific obstacles. Technological and medical advancements leading to universal health benefits need to be rapidly and fairly disseminated.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
7.80%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: JAMA Health Forum is an international, peer-reviewed, online, open access journal that addresses health policy and strategies affecting medicine, health, and health care. The journal publishes original research, evidence-based reports, and opinion about national and global health policy. It covers innovative approaches to health care delivery and health care economics, access, quality, safety, equity, and reform. In addition to publishing articles, JAMA Health Forum also features commentary from health policy leaders on the JAMA Forum. It covers news briefs on major reports released by government agencies, foundations, health policy think tanks, and other policy-focused organizations. JAMA Health Forum is a member of the JAMA Network, which is a consortium of peer-reviewed, general medical and specialty publications. The journal presents curated health policy content from across the JAMA Network, including journals such as JAMA and JAMA Internal Medicine.
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