THE CONTRIBUTION OF SMOKING TO SEX-DIFFERENCES IN LIFE EXPECTANCY - 4NORDIC COUNTRIES AND THE NETHERLANDS 1970-1989

Citation
T. Valkonen et F. Vanpoppel, THE CONTRIBUTION OF SMOKING TO SEX-DIFFERENCES IN LIFE EXPECTANCY - 4NORDIC COUNTRIES AND THE NETHERLANDS 1970-1989, European journal of public health, 7(3), 1997, pp. 302-310
Citations number
42
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath","Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath
ISSN journal
11011262
Volume
7
Issue
3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
302 - 310
Database
ISI
SICI code
1101-1262(1997)7:3<302:TCOSTS>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
Several studies have shown that smoking is a major cause of the lower life expectancy of men compared to women, but there has been no resear ch to assess how far international differences in sex differences in l ife expectancy and changes in these differences can be accounted for b y smoking. This paper gives quantitative estimates of the effects of s moking on sex differences in life expectancy at age 35 years in Denmar k, Finland, Norway, Sweden and The Netherlands during 1970-1989. The d ata on cause-specific mortality by age and sex were obtained from stan dardized computer-tape transcripts of the WHO mortality data bank. An indirect method based on lung cancer mortality as the indicator of the cumulative effects of smoking was used to estimate the numbers of smo king-attributable deaths in 4 periods. The validity of the method was assessed by comparing the relevant parts of the results with those obt ained in 8 national follow-up studies. On average, 2.4 years or more t han 40% of the total sex difference in life expectancy in 1970-1974 wa s estimated to be attributable to smoking in the 5 countries. By 1985- 1989 the contribution of smoking dropped to 1.8 years or approximately 30% of the total difference. The contribution of smoking to the sex d ifference was greatest in The Netherlands and smallest in Sweden. As a result of the decline in smoking-attributable male mortality, the sex difference in life expectancy diminished in Finland in the 1980s. In the other countries the difference continued to grow despite the incre ase in the loss of female life expectancy caused by smoking.