© 1999 - 2012
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Old-Age Mortality in Germany prior to and after Reunification

Services
Bookmark this page
Send this article to a friend
Download to Citation Manager
file RIS format
file BibTeX format
Citations and Similar Articles
PubMed
Articles by Arjan Gjonca
Articles by Hilke Brockmann
Articles by Heiner Maier
Google Scholar
Articles by Arjan Gjonca
Articles by Hilke Brockmann
Articles by Heiner Maier
Article and its Citations
 

Arjan Gjonca
Hilke Brockmann
Heiner Maier

 
VOLUME 3 - ARTICLE 1
 
Date Received: 5 Jun 2000
Date Published: 12 Jul 2000

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol3/1/

doi:10.4054/DemRes.2000.3.1
   
PDF file Click the icon to view and/or download the PDF file.
Once you are in the PDF file, use your browser back button to return to this page.
HTML file Click the icon to view the HTML version of this article.
It will be displayed in a new window.

Abstract

Recent trends in German life expectancy show a considerable increase. Most of this increase has resulted from decreasing mortality at older ages. Patterns of oldest old mortality (ages 80+) differed significantly between men and women as well as between East and West Germany.
While West German oldest old mortality decreased since the mid 1970s, comparable decreases in East Germany did not become evident until the late 1980s. Yet, the East German mortality decline accelerated after German reunification in 1990, particularly among East German females, attesting to the plasticity of human life expectancy and the importance of late life events. Medical care, individual economic resources and life-style factors are discussed as potential determinants of the decline in old age mortality in Germany.

Author's affiliation
Arjan Gjonca
London School of Economics, United Kingdom
Hilke Brockmann
University of Bremen, Germany
Heiner Maier
Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Germany

Keywords
German reunification, Germany, life expectancy, mortality, oldest-old

Word count (Main text)
5861

Other articles by the same author/authors (in Demographic Research)
file[19-11] Albania: Trends and patterns, proximate determinants and policies of fertility change

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
file [23-14] A modified new method for estimating smoking-attributable mortality in high-income countries (mortality, life expectancy)
file [22-23] Mortality in the Caucasus: An attempt to re-estimate recent mortality trends in Armenia and Georgia (mortality, life expectancy)
file [19-35] An integrated approach to cause-of-death analysis: cause-deleted life tables and decompositions of life expectancy (mortality, life expectancy)
file [15-21] Mortality tempo-adjustment: An empirical application (mortality, life expectancy)
file [14-13] Survival differences among the oldest old in Sardinia: who, what, where, and why? (mortality, life expectancy)

[ Back to previous page ]