Housing and Inequalities in US Life Expectancy, Child and Youth Mortality, and All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality, 1979-2020: Results from the National Longitudinal Mortality Study and the National Vital Statistics System.

International Journal of MCH and AIDS Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-12-20 DOI:10.21106/ijma.653
Gopal K Singh, Hyunjung Lee, Lyoung Hee Kim
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Abstract

Background: Limited research exists on the association between housing, life expectancy, and mortality disparities in the United States (US). Using longitudinal individual-level and pooled county-level mortality data from 1979 to 2020, we examine disparities in life expectancy, child and youth mortality, and all-cause and cause-specific mortality in the US by several housing variables.

Methods: Using the 1979-2011 National Longitudinal Mortality Study (N=1,313,627) and the 2011-2020 linked county-level National Mortality Database and American Community Survey, we analyzed disparities in life expectancy and all-cause and cause-specific disparities by housing tenure, household crowding, and housing stability. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression was used to analyze individual-level mortality differentials by housing tenure. Age-adjusted mortality rates and rate ratios were used to analyze area-level disparities in mortality by housing variables.

Results: US homeowners had, on average, a 3.5-year longer life expectancy at birth than renters (74.22 vs. 70.76 years), with advantages in longevity associated with homeownership being greater for males than for females; for American Indians/Alaska Natives, non-Hispanic Whites, and non-Hispanic Blacks than for Asian/Pacific islanders and Hispanics; and for the US-born than for immigrants. Compared with renters, homeowners had 22% lower risks of all-cause mortality, 15% lower child mortality, 17% lower youth mortality, and significantly lower mortality from cardiovascular diseases, all cancers combined, stomach, liver, esophageal and cervical cancer, diabetes, influenza and pneumonia, COPD, cirrhosis, kidney disease, HIV/AIDS, infectious diseases, unintentional injuries, suicide, and homicide.

Conclusion and global health implications: Several aspects of housing are strongly associated with life expectancy, child and youth mortality, and all-cause and cause-specific mortality in the US. Policies that aim to provide well-designed, accessible, and affordable housing to residents of both developed and developing countries are important policy options for addressing one of the most fundamental determinants of health for disadvantaged individuals and communities and for reducing health inequities globally.

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1979-2020 年美国预期寿命、儿童和青少年死亡率以及全因和特定原因死亡率中的住房和不平等现象:全国纵向死亡率研究》和《全国人口动态统计系统》的结果。
背景:关于美国住房、预期寿命和死亡率差异之间关系的研究十分有限。我们利用 1979 年至 2020 年的个人纵向死亡率数据和汇总的县级死亡率数据,通过几个住房变量研究了美国人在预期寿命、儿童和青少年死亡率以及全因和特定原因死亡率方面的差异:利用 1979-2011 年全国纵向死亡率研究(N=1,313,627)以及 2011-2020 年县级全国死亡率数据库和美国社区调查的关联数据,我们按住房保有权、家庭拥挤程度和住房稳定性分析了预期寿命差异以及全因和特定原因死亡率差异。多变量考克斯比例危险回归用于分析按住房保有权划分的个人水平死亡率差异。经年龄调整后的死亡率和比率用于分析按住房变量划分的地区级死亡率差异:美国房主的出生时预期寿命平均比租房者长 3.5 岁(74.22 岁对 70.76 岁),男性与房主相关的长寿优势大于女性;美国印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民、非西班牙裔白人和非西班牙裔黑人的长寿优势大于亚裔/太平洋岛民和西班牙裔;美国出生者的长寿优势大于移民。与租房者相比,房主的全因死亡风险降低了 22%,儿童死亡率降低了 15%,青少年死亡率降低了 17%,心血管疾病、所有癌症、胃癌、肝癌、食道癌和宫颈癌、糖尿病、流感和肺炎、慢性阻塞性肺病、肝硬化、肾病、艾滋病、传染病、意外伤害、自杀和他杀的死亡率显著降低:在美国,住房的几个方面与预期寿命、儿童和青少年死亡率以及全因和特定原因死亡率密切相关。旨在为发达国家和发展中国家的居民提供精心设计、方便使用且价格合理的住房的政策,是解决弱势个人和社区健康的最基本决定因素之一以及减少全球健康不平等的重要政策选择。
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