Published October 1, 2019 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Recent adverse mortality trends in Scotland: comparison with other high-income countries.

  • 1. National Health Service Scotland
  • 2. National Records of Scotland

Description

Objective Gains in life expectancy have faltered in several high-income countries in recent years. We aim to compare life expectancy trends in Scotland to those seen internationally, and to assess the timing of any recent changes in mortality trends for Scotland. Setting Austria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, England & Wales, Estonia, France, Germany, Hungary, Iceland, Israel, Japan, Korea, Latvia, Lithuania, Netherlands, Northern Ireland, Poland, Scotland, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, USA. Methods We used life expectancy data from the Human Mortality Database (HMD) to calculate the mean annual life expectancy change for 24 high-income countries over five-year periods from 1992 to 2016, and the change for Scotland for five-year periods from 1857 to 2016. One- and two-break segmented regression models were applied to mortality data from National Records of Scotland (NRS) to identify turning points in age-standardised mortality trends between 1990 and 2018. Results In 2012-2016 life expectancies in Scotland increased by 2.5 weeks/year for females and 4.5 weeks/year for males, the smallest gains of any period since the early 1970s. The improvements in life expectancy in 2012-2016 were smallest among females (<2.0 weeks/year) in Northern Ireland, Iceland, England & Wales and the USA and among males (<5.0 weeks/year) in Iceland, USA, England & Wales and Scotland. Japan, Korea, and countries of Eastern Europe have seen substantial gains in the same period. The best estimate of when mortality rates changed to a slower rate of improvement in Scotland was the year to 2012 Q4 for males and the year to 2014 Q2 for females. Conclusion Life expectancy improvement has stalled across many, but not all, high income countries. The recent change in the mortality trend in Scotland occurred within the period 2012-2014. Further research is required to understand these trends, but governments must also take timely action on plausible contributors.

Notes

Files

README.txt

Files (664.9 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:dc7adee5fca2ea712661db12a30a335f
431.3 kB Download
md5:6d72ecfc2b5dfa46d43736f8745f0770
134.0 kB Download
md5:8760375476a4b6ebdeb58d61168ad971
8.1 kB Preview Download
md5:88c794514968431663dbf6b82cd6ba7f
42.5 kB Download
md5:048279ce9365f366c37c27ca04c90845
49.0 kB Download

Additional details

Related works