Regional inequalities in mortality in Brazil: contributions of age and cause of death to changes in life expectancy and lifespan variation between 2008 and 2018

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Abstract

Brazil is a country marked by substantial socioeconomic inequality among regions, which translates into regional differentials in mortality. For better monitoring these differentials, it is important to analyze not only population average mortality levels, but also the age at death variation. This article analyzes cause-of-death contributions to changes in life expectancy and age-at-death variation in Brazil and its regions between 2008 and 2018. Our results suggest an increase in regional inequalities in life expectancy over the decade. However, regional differences in age-at-death variation remained nearly constant. Changes in mortality by cause impact the age-at-death variation differently in each region: the reduction in mortality from external causes substantially contributed to decreasing the variation in age at death in the South and Southeast regions, whereas the contribution of deaths from conditions originating in the perinatal period was substantive only in the Northeast region. Finally, we reaffirm the importance of age-at-death dispersion indicators to have a broader view of Brazil’s regional differentials in mortality.

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APA

Calazans, J. A., Guimarães, R., & Nepomuceno, M. R. (2023). Regional inequalities in mortality in Brazil: contributions of age and cause of death to changes in life expectancy and lifespan variation between 2008 and 2018. Revista Brasileira de Estudos de Populacao, 40. https://doi.org/10.20947/S0102-3098a0244

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