Volume 52 - Article 3 | Pages 71–110
Jointly estimating subnational mortality for multiple populations
By Ameer Dharamshi, Monica Alexander, Celeste Winant, Magali Barbieri
Abstract
Background: Understanding patterns in mortality across subpopulations is essential for local health policy decision-making. One of the key challenges of subnational mortality rate estimation is the presence of small populations and zero or near zero death counts. When studying differences between subpopulations, this challenge is compounded as the small populations are further divided along socioeconomic or demographic lines.
Objective: We aim to develop a model to estimate subnational age-specific mortality rates that accounts for the dependencies in mortality experiences across subpopulations.
Methods: We develop a Bayesian hierarchical principal components-based model that shows correlations across subpopulations.
Results: We test this approach in a simulation study and also use the model to estimate age- and sex-specific mortality rates for counties in the United States. The model performs well in validation exercises and the US estimates suggest substantial variation in mortality trends over time across geographic lines.
Contribution: Our proposed model jointly estimates age-specific mortality rates for multiple subpopulations at the subnational level. By sharing information across subpopulations, our model improves on previous approaches that treat subpopulations as independent. Additionally, we demonstrate that ancillary correlation parameters are a useful tool for studying the convergence and divergence of mortality patterns over time.
Author's Affiliation
- Ameer Dharamshi - University of Washington, United States of America EMAIL
- Monica Alexander - University of Toronto, Canada EMAIL
- Celeste Winant - University of California, Berkeley, United States of America EMAIL
- Magali Barbieri - Institut National d'Études Démographiques (INED), France EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Developing and implementing the UN's probabilistic population projections as a milestone for Bayesian demography: An interview with Adrian Raftery
Volume 51 - Article 1
Measuring short-term mobility patterns in North America using Facebook advertising data, with an application to adjusting COVID-19 mortality rates
Volume 50 - Article 10
Bayesian implementation of Rogers–Castro model migration schedules: An alternative technique for parameter estimation
Volume 49 - Article 42
Frailty at death: An examination of multiple causes of death in four low mortality countries in 2017
Volume 49 - Article 2
Mexican mortality 1990‒2016: Comparison of unadjusted and adjusted estimates
Volume 44 - Article 30
Costa Rican mortality 1950‒2013: An evaluation of data quality and trends compared with other countries
Volume 40 - Article 29
Global estimation of neonatal mortality using a Bayesian hierarchical splines regression model
Volume 38 - Article 15
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Adolescence in flux: Unmasking 30 years of change in subnational parity-specific adolescent fertility in Mexico
Volume 49 - Article 15
| Keywords:
adolescent fertility,
Mexico,
parity progression ratios,
subnational,
teenage childbearing
A probabilistic model for analyzing summary birth history data
Volume 47 - Article 11
| Keywords:
Bayesian hierarchical model,
Brass method,
Malawi,
spatial smoothing,
temporal smoothing
Using census data to measure maternal mortality: A review of recent experience
Volume 39 - Article 11
| Keywords:
births,
estimation,
evaluation,
maternal mortality,
population censuses,
pregnancy-related mortality
Probabilistic projection of subnational total fertility rates
Volume 38 - Article 60
| Keywords:
autoregressive model,
Bayesian hierarchical model,
correlation,
scaling model,
subnational projections,
total fertility rate (TFR)
Global estimation of neonatal mortality using a Bayesian hierarchical splines regression model
Volume 38 - Article 15
| Keywords:
Bayesian hierarchical model,
millennium development goals,
neonatal mortality
Cited References: 58
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar