Elsevier

Health & Place

Volume 47, September 2017, Pages 44-53
Health & Place

Determinants of the magnitude of socioeconomic inequalities in mortality: A study of 17 European countries

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthplace.2017.07.005Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • The magnitude of inequalities in mortality differs importantly between countries.

  • This is the first study of the determinants of these between-country variations.

  • Smoking, alcohol, and poverty partly drive these between-country variations.

  • Factors like national income also influence how large mortality inequalities are.

  • Between-country variations in health inequalities help to find policy entry-points.

Abstract

The magnitude of socioeconomic inequalities in mortality differs importantly between countries, but these variations have not been satisfactorily explained. We explored the role of behavioral and structural determinants of these variations, by using a dataset covering 17 European countries in the period 1970–2010, and by conducting multilevel multivariate regression analyses. Our results suggest that between-country variations in inequalities in current mortality can partly be understood from variations in inequalities in smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, and poverty. Also, countries with higher national income, higher quality of government, higher social transfers, higher health care expenditure and more self-expression values have smaller inequalities in mortality. Finally, trends in behavioral risk factors, particularly smoking and excessive alcohol consumption, appear to partly explain variations in inequalities in mortality trends. This study shows that analyses of variations in health inequalities between countries can help to identify entry-points for policy.

Keywords

International variations
Mortality
Health inequalities
Determinants
Europe

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