Volume 51 - Article 17 | Pages 577–594  

The role of sex and age in seasonal mortality – the case of Poland

By Jacek Cypryjański, Urszula Ala-Karvia, Ewa Putek-Szeląg

Abstract

Background: Seasonality of mortality is a well-research topic. However, there are few cross-national studies on total populations that would allow a clear comparison of the results. This article replicates Rau and Doblhammer (2003) and adjusts their methods to Polish data nearly two decades later.

Objective: The article addresses the following questions about the seasonality of deaths in Poland: How do men and women differ in terms of seasonal fluctuations in mortality? How does the seasonality of deaths change with age as well as between cohorts for the same age groups? Do the results follow the ones from the original study?

Methods: A 5 percent sample drawn from Polish population ages 50+ who lived in the year 1988 was followed by 30 years. A logistic regression model was used to estimate the odds ratios of dying in different age, sex, and month/season.

Results: Winter excess mortality for Poles ages 50+ was 9.6 percent of all deaths in the years 1988–2017. Clear seasonal fluctuations in mortality were recorded for both men and women and different age cohorts. The seasonality increased with age, affected elderly men more than elderly women, and decade of birth had an impact on mortality risk.

Contribution: This study documents the seasonality of deaths in Poland by sex and age over the past three decades. It replicates the paper on the Danish population ages 50+ and reflects on differences and similarities between the results.

Author’s Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

Changes in seasonality of births in Poland in the years 1900–2009
Volume 40 - Article 49

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