Volume 37 - Article 45 | Pages 1445–1476
Summertime, and the livin’ is easy: Winter and summer pseudoseasonal life expectancy in the United States
By Tina Ho, Andrew Noymer
Abstract
Background: In temperate climates, mortality is seasonal with a winter-dominant pattern, due in part to specific causes of death, including pneumonia, influenza, and cold-induced thrombosis. Cardiac causes, which are the leading cause of death in the United States, are winter-seasonal, although the pathways are incompletely understood. Interactions between circulating respiratory viruses (e.g., influenza) and cardiac conditions have been suggested as a cause of winter-dominant mortality patterns.
Objective: In this paper we aim to quantify the total mortality burden of winter in the United States.
Methods: We calculate 'pseudoseasonal' life expectancy, dividing the year into two six-month spans, one encompassing winter, the other summer.
Results: During the summer when cold weather is absent and the circulation of respiratory viruses is significantly reduced, life expectancy is about one year longer. We also quantify the seasonal mortality difference in terms of seasonal 'equivalent ages' (defined herein) and proportional hazards.
Contribution: We quantify the effects of winter mortality. The population-level mortality reduction of a perfect influenza vaccine (which can only reduce a portion of winter-attributable mortality) would be much more modest than is often recognized.
Author's Affiliation
- Tina Ho - University of California, Irvine, United States of America EMAIL
- Andrew Noymer - University of California, Irvine, United States of America EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Divergence without decoupling: Male and female life expectancy usually co-move
Volume 31 - Article 51
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Changes in birth seasonality in Spain: Data from 1863–1870 and 1900–2021
Volume 49 - Article 35
| Keywords:
Box-Jenkins method,
Cosinor analysis,
Fourier analysis,
season of birth,
seasonality,
time series,
vital statistics
Early life exposure to cigarette smoking and adult and old-age male mortality: Evidence from linked US full-count census and mortality data
Volume 49 - Article 25
| Keywords:
linked census and mortality data,
linked census data,
smoking,
United States of America
Birth month and adult lifespan: A within-family, cohort, and spatial examination using FamiLinx data in the United States (1700–1899)
Volume 49 - Article 9
| Keywords:
birth timing,
debilitation,
lifespan,
longevity,
seasonality
Comparative evidence of years lived with reproductive-age morbidity in sub-Saharan Africa (2010‒2019)
Volume 49 - Article 6
| Keywords:
life expectancy,
maternal morbidities,
reproductive age,
sub-Saharan Africa
Age reporting for the oldest old in the Brazilian COVID-19 vaccination database: What can we learn from it?
Volume 48 - Article 28
| Keywords:
age misreporting,
Brazil,
COVID-19,
mortality crossover,
oldest old,
population aging,
vaccinations
Cited References: 149
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar