Educational inequalities in hypothermia mortality in the Baltic countries and Finland in 2000–15

Author:

Stickley Andrew12,Baburin Aleksei3,Jasilionis Domantas45ORCID,Krumins Juris6,Martikainen Pekka47ORCID,Kondo Naoki2,Shin Jae Il8ORCID,Oh Hans9,Waldman Kyle10,Leinsalu Mall13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Stockholm Centre for Health and Social Change, Södertörn University , Huddinge, Sweden

2. Department of Social Epidemiology, Graduate School of Medicine and School of Public Health, Kyoto University , Kyoto, Japan

3. Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, National Institute for Health Development , Tallinn, Estonia

4. Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research , Rostock, Germany

5. Demographic Research Centre, Vytautas Magnus University , Kaunas, Lithuania

6. Demography Unit, Faculty of Business, Management and Economics, University of Latvia , Riga, Latvia

7. Population Research Unit, University of Helsinki , Helsinki, Finland

8. Department of Pediatrics, Yonsei University College of Medicine , Seoul, Korea

9. Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work, University of Southern California , Los Angeles, CA, USA

10. Department of Sociology, Harvard University , Cambridge, MA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Despite an increased focus on cold-related mortality in recent years, there has been comparatively little research specifically on hypothermia mortality and its associated factors. Methods Educational inequalities in hypothermia mortality among individuals aged 30–74 in the Baltic countries (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania) and Finland in 2000–15 were examined using data from longitudinal mortality follow-up studies of population censuses (the Baltics) and from a longitudinal register-based population data file (Finland). Results Age-standardized mortality rates (ASMRs) were much higher in the Baltic countries than in Finland across the study period. From 2000–07 to 2008–15, overall ASMRs declined in all countries except among Finnish women. Although a strong educational gradient was observed in hypothermia mortality in all countries in 2000–07, inequalities were larger in the Baltic countries. Between 2000–07 and 2008–15, ASMRs declined in all educational groups except for high-educated women in Finland and low-educated women in Lithuania; the changes however were not always statistically significant. The absolute mortality decline was often larger among the low educated resulting in narrowing absolute inequalities (excepting Lithuania), whereas a larger relative decline among the high educated (excepting Finnish women) resulted in a considerable widening of relative inequalities in hypothermia mortality by 2008–15. Conclusion Although some reduction was observed in absolute educational inequalities in hypothermia mortality in 2000–15, substantial and widening relative inequalities highlight the need for further action in combatting factors behind deaths from excessive cold in socioeconomically disadvantaged groups, including risky alcohol consumption and homelessness.

Funder

Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences

National Institute for Health Development

Max Planck Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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