Volume 27 - Article 9 | Pages 233-260

The contribution of smoking to regional mortality differences in the Netherlands

By Fanny Janssen, Alette Spriensma

Print this page  Contatc  Twitter

 

 
Date received:11 Nov 2011
Date published:10 Aug 2012
Word count:4917
Keywords:all-cause mortality, Netherlands, regional differences, smoking, smoking-related mortality, socioeconomic status
DOI:10.4054/DemRes.2012.27.9
 

Abstract

Background: Smoking is an important preventable determinant of morbidity and mortality. Knowledge about its role in regional mortality differences can help us to identify relevant policy areas, and to explain national mortality differences.

Objective: We explored the extent to which the regional differences in all-cause mortality in the Netherlands could be due to smoking, by examining its link with regional differences in smoking-attributable mortality.

Methods: All-cause mortality, lung cancer mortality, and population numbers were obtained from Statistics Netherlands for the period 2004-2008, by 40 NUTS-3 regions, age, and sex. Smoking-attributable mortality was estimated using an adapted indirect Peto-Lopez method. We mapped regional differences in age-standardised all-cause mortality, smoking-attributable mortality fractions, and smoking- and non-smoking-related mortality rates. We assessed spatial clustering, calculated correlations, and compared and decomposed regional variance.

Results: Significant regional differences in all-cause mortality, exhibiting a random pattern, were found. Smoking-attributable mortality fractions, which ranged from 22% to 30% among males and 7% to 14% among females, correlated significantly with all-cause mortality, especially among males. Smoking-attributable mortality varied far more than all-cause mortality, while non-smoking-attributable mortality varied less than all-cause mortality. The variance in smoking-attributable mortality contributed 39% to the regional variance in all-cause mortality among males, and 30% among females.

Conclusions: Smoking-attributable mortality thus clearly contributed to the regional differences in all-cause mortality, especially among males. This finding can be linked to past regional differences in smoking behaviour and underlying regional differences in socio-economic variables.

Author's Affiliation

Fanny Janssen - University of Groningen, Netherlands [Email]
Alette Spriensma - VU University Medical Centre, Netherlands [Email]

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research

» What has high fertility got to do with the low birth weight problem in Africa?
Volume 28 - Article 25    | Keywords: socioeconomic status

» Application of the modified PGW method for determining the smoking attributable fraction of deaths in New Zealand Maori, Pacific and non-Maori non-Pacific populations
Volume 28 - Article 7    | Keywords: smoking-related mortality

» Mortality decline and reproductive change during the Dutch demographic transition: Revisiting a traditional debate with new data
Volume 27 - Article 11    | Keywords: Netherlands

» The future of death in America
Volume 25 - Article 1    | Keywords: smoking

» A modified new method for estimating smoking-attributable mortality in high-income countries
Volume 23 - Article 14    | Keywords: smoking

Articles

»Volume 27

 

Citations

 

 

Similar Articles

 

 

Jump to Article

Volume Page
Volume Article ID