The Hispanic Mortality Advantage and Ethnic Misclassification on US Death Certificates

被引:109
作者
Arias, Elizabeth [1 ]
Eschbach, Karl [2 ]
Schauman, William S. [3 ]
Backlund, Eric L. [3 ]
Sortie, Paul D. [4 ]
机构
[1] Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Mortal Stat Branch, Div Vital Stat, Natl Ctr Hlth Stat, Hyattsville, MD 20782 USA
[2] Univ Texas San Antonio, San Antonio, TX USA
[3] US Bur Census, Suitland, MD USA
[4] NHLBI, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
关键词
UNITED-STATES; PARADOX; HEALTH;
D O I
10.2105/AJPH.2008.135863
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
100235 [预防医学];
摘要
Objectives. We tested the data artifact hypothesis regarding the Hispanic mortality advantage by investigating whether and to what degree this advantage is explained by Hispanic origin misclassification on US death certificates. Methods. We used the National Longitudinal Mortality Study, which links Current Population Survey records to death certificates for 1979 through 1998, to estimate the sensitivity, specificity, and net ascertainment of Hispanic ethnicity on death certificates compared with survey classifications. Using national vital statistics mortality data, we estimated Hispanic age-specific and age-adjusted death rates, which were uncorrected and corrected for death certificate misclassification, and produced death rate ratios comparing the Hispanic with the non-Hispanic White population. Results. Hispanic origin reporting on death certificates in the United States is reasonably good. The net ascertainment of Hispanic origin is just 5% higher on survey records than on death certificates. Corrected age-adjusted death rates for Hispanics are lower than those for the non-Hispanic White population by close to 20%. Conclusions. The Hispanic mortality paradox is not explained by an incongruence between ethnic classification in vital registration and population data systems. (Am J Public Health. 2010;100:S171-S177. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2008.135863)
引用
收藏
页码:S171 / S177
页数:7
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]
Anderson R N, 1998, Natl Vital Stat Rep, V47, P1
[2]
[Anonymous], 1997, FED REG, V62, P58
[3]
[Anonymous], VITAL HLTH STAT
[5]
Cresce A.R., 2004, IDENTIFICATION HISPA
[6]
Cresce ArthurR., 2003, ANAL GEN HISPANIC RE
[7]
Mortality among elderly Hispanics in the United States: Past evidence and new results [J].
Elo, IT ;
Turra, CM ;
Kestenbaum, B ;
Ferguson, BR .
DEMOGRAPHY, 2004, 41 (01) :109-128
[8]
Ascertainment of Hispanic ethnicity on California death certificates: Implications for the explanation of the Hispanic mortality advantage [J].
Eschbach, Karl ;
Kuo, Yong-Fang ;
Goodwin, James S. .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2006, 96 (12) :2209-2215
[9]
Franzini Luisa, 2001, Ethnicity and Disease, V11, P496
[10]
Paradox found (again): Infant mortality among the Mexican-origin population in the United States [J].
Hummer, Robert A. ;
Powers, Daniel. A. ;
Pullum, Starling G. ;
Gossman, Ginger L. ;
Frisbie, W. Parker .
DEMOGRAPHY, 2007, 44 (03) :441-457