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High and Rising Mortality Rates Among Working-Age Adults [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 596 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Aug-2021
  • Izdevniecība: National Academies Press
  • ISBN-10: 0309684730
  • ISBN-13: 9780309684736
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  • Cena: 139,25 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 596 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Aug-2021
  • Izdevniecība: National Academies Press
  • ISBN-10: 0309684730
  • ISBN-13: 9780309684736
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
The past century has witnessed remarkable advances in life expectancy in the United States and throughout the world. In 2010, however, progress in life expectancy in the United States began to stall, despite continuing to increase in other high-income countries. Alarmingly, U.S. life expectancy fell between 2014 and 2015 and continued to decline through 2017, the longest sustained decline in life expectancy in a century (since the influenza pandemic of 1918-1919). The recent decline in U.S. life expectancy appears to have been the product of two trends: (1) an increase in mortality among middle-aged and younger adults, defined as those aged 25-64 years (i.e., "working age"), which began in the 1990s for several specific causes of death (e.g., drug- and alcohol-related causes and suicide); and (2) a slowing of declines in working-age mortality due to other causes of death (mainly cardiovascular diseases) after 2010.



High and Rising Mortality Rates among Working Age Adults highlights the crisis of rising premature mortality that threatens the future of the nation's families, communities, and national wellbeing. This report identifies the key drivers of increasing death rates and disparities in working-age mortality over the period 1990 to 2017; elucidates modifiable risk factors that could alleviate poor health in the working-age population, as well as widening health inequalities; identifies key knowledge gaps and make recommendations for future research and data collection to fill those gaps; and explores potential policy implications. After a comprehensive analysis of the trends in working-age mortality by age, sex, race/ethnicity, and geography using the most up-to-date data, this report then looks upstream to the macrostructural factors (e.g., public policies, macroeconomic trends, social and economic inequality, technology) and social determinants (e.g., socioeconomic status, environment, social networks) that may affect the health of working-age Americans in multiple ways and through multiple pathways.

Table of Contents



Front Matter Summary PART I 1 Introduction 2 U.S. Mortality in an International Context 3 U.S. Trends in All-Cause Mortality Among Working-Age Adults 4 U.S. Trends in Cause-Specific Mortality Among Working-Age Adults 5 U.S. Mortality Data: Data Quality, Methodology, and Recommendations PART II 6 A Framework for Developing Explanations of Working-Age Mortality Trends 7 Opioids, Other Drugs, and Alcohol 8 Suicide 9 Cardiometabolic Diseases 10 The Relationship Between Economic Factors and Mortality PART III 11 Implications for Policy and Research References Appendix A: Mortality Data Analyses: Review Process and Detailed Mortality Rate Tables Appendix B: Meeting Agendas Appendix C: Biographical Sketches
Summary 1(16)
PART I
1 Introduction
17(16)
Individual and Societal Implications of Rising Mortality Among Working-Age Adults
20(3)
Searching for Explanations
23(2)
Charge to the Study Committee
25(1)
Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Working-Age Mortality
25(3)
Study Methods and Limitations of the Evidence Base
28(2)
Organization of the Report
30(3)
2 U.S. Mortality in an International Context
33(22)
Life Expectancy at Birth in the United States Versus Peer Countries
35(2)
The U.S. Mortality Disadvantage by Age
37(1)
International Differences in Life Expectancy Decomposed by Age
37(2)
U.S. Mortality Relative to International Peers by Age
39(1)
International Trends in Working-Age Mortality
40(2)
U.S. Mortality by Cause of Death in International Perspective
42(5)
Summary
47(1)
Annex 2-1 International Trends Methodology
48(1)
Source of International Trend Comparison Data
48(1)
Data for the Sixteen Peer Countries
48(1)
Data for the United States
49(1)
Analytic Strategy
50(1)
Life Expectancy at Birth
51(1)
Arriaga Age Decomposition of Differences in Life Expectancy
51(2)
Ratio of Age-Specific Mortality in the United States to That in the Peer Countries
53(1)
The Probability of Death Between Ages 25 and 64
53(2)
3 U.S. Trends in All-Cause Mortality Among Working-Age Adults
55(40)
Trends in All-Cause Mortality by Sex and Age
56(2)
Trends in All-Cause Mortality by Sex, Age, and Race and Ethnicity
58(5)
Trends in Mortality by Socioeconomic Status
63(3)
Geographic Differences in Mortality Trends
66(1)
Trends in All-Cause Mortality by Metropolitan Area Type
67(3)
Trends in All-Cause Mortality Across U.S. Regions and States
70(5)
Trends in All-Cause Mortality Across U.S. Counties
75(9)
Summary of Geographic Trends in Mortality
84(1)
Summary
85(3)
Annex 3-1 Mortality Trends Among U.S. Asians/Pacific Islanders and American Indians/Alaska Natives
88(1)
Mortality Trends Among U.S. Asians and Pacific Islanders
88(2)
Mortality Trends Among American Indians/Alaska Natives
90(3)
Changes in High/Low Mortality Counties by Metropolitan Status
93(2)
4 U.S. Trends in Cause-Specific Mortality Among Working-Age Adults
95(74)
Trends in U.S. Working-Age Mortality by Cause of Death
97(2)
Non-Hispanic White Adults
99(10)
Working-Age Non-Hispanic Black Adults
109(2)
Hispanic Adults
111(7)
Disparities in Cause-Specific Mortality by Socioeconomic Status
118(9)
Cause-Specific Mortality Trends by Metropolitan Status
127(1)
Temporal Patterns in Cause-Specific Mortality Trends
128(7)
Summary
135(13)
Annex 4-1 Trends in Cause-Specific Mortality Among American Indians and Alaska Natives
148(2)
Cause-Specific Mortality Trends by Metropolitan Area Status
150(19)
5 U.S. Mortality Data: Data Quality, Methodology, and Recommendations
169(18)
The U.S. National Vital Statistics System (NVSS) and the Construction of Mortality Rates
169(2)
Limitations and Quality of Mortality Data
171(1)
Limitations of Death Certificate Data and Use of Linked Mortality Data
172(8)
Estimation of Mortality Rates in This Report
180(2)
Recommendations
182(5)
PART II
6 A Framework for Developing Explanations of Working-Age Mortality Trends
187(32)
A Conceptual Framework for U.S. Working-Age Mortality
187(3)
Macro-Level Upstream Factors in Working-Age Mortality
190(3)
Meso-Level Factors
193(2)
Individual-Level Factors
195(1)
The Role of Life-Course Stage
196(1)
Considerations in Developing Explanations for Trends in Working-Age Mortality
197(1)
Single Versus Multiple Explanations
198(1)
Interactions or Synergies and Dynamic Relations Among Factors
198(2)
Socioeconomic Inequality at All Levels
200(1)
Differences Across Social Groups
200(1)
Levels Versus Trends
201(1)
Time Lags
202(1)
Attention to Period and Cohort Effects
202(2)
Summary
204(1)
Annex 6-1 Period- and Cohort-Based Examination of Trends in U.S. Working-Age Mortality
204(7)
Drug-Related Death Rates Among U.S. Black and White Men
211(1)
Death Rates from Cardiometabolic Diseases Among U.S. White Men and Women
211(3)
Death Rates from Alcohol Use Among U.S. Black and White Men and Women
214(5)
7 Opioids, Other Drugs, and Alcohol
219(64)
Trends in Mortality Due to Drug Poisoning and Alcohol
220(1)
Drug Poisoning Mortality
220(12)
Alcohol-Induced Mortality
232(6)
Summary of Trends in Mortality from Drugs and Alcohol
238(2)
Explanations for the Rise in Working-Age Mortality from Drug Poisoning and Alcohol-Induced Causes
240(1)
Supply-Side Explanations
240(10)
Demand-Side Explanations
250(20)
Summary
270(3)
Implications for Research and Policy
273(10)
8 Suicide
283(28)
Trends in Suicide
284(7)
Explanations for the Rise in Suicide Mortality
291(13)
Summary
304(3)
Implications for Research and Policy
307(4)
9 Cardiometabolic Diseases
311(52)
Trends in Cardiometabolic Mortality
312(1)
Endocrine, Nutritional, and Metabolic Diseases
312(1)
Hypertensive Heart Disease
313(12)
Ischemic Heart Disease and Other Circulatory System Diseases
325(6)
Summary of Trends
331(2)
Explanations for the Trends in Cardiometabolic Mortality
333(1)
Rising Rates of Obesity
333(11)
Diminishing Returns of Medical Advances
344(6)
Social, Economic, and Cultural Change
350(4)
Summary
354(2)
Implications for Research and Policy
356(7)
10 The Relationship Between Economic Factors and Mortality
363(14)
Conceptual Challenges
364(1)
Association Between Economic Deprivation and Worse, and Rising, Mortality
364(2)
Job Loss and Deaths of Despair
366(1)
Trade/Import Competition and Mortality
367(1)
Lack of a Strong Association Between Economic Fluctuations and Increased Mortality
368(2)
Association Between Income Inequality and Mortality
370(1)
Summary
371(1)
Implications for Research and Policy
372(5)
PART III
11 Implications for Policy and Research
377(42)
A Framework for the Categorization of Policy and Research Implications
379(2)
Medical Science and Health Care Access and Delivery
381(1)
Background
381(2)
Implications for Policy and Research
383(2)
Public Health
385(1)
Background
385(4)
Implications for Policy and Research
389(6)
Social and Economic Policies
395(1)
Background
395(2)
Implications for Research and Policy
397(10)
Lessons from the COVID-19 Pandemic
407(2)
Conclusion
409(10)
REFERENCES
419(54)
APPENDIXES
A Mortality Data Analyses: Review Process and Detailed Mortality Rate Tables
473(86)
B Meeting Agendas
559(6)
C Biographical Sketches
565