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The Contribution of National Disparities to International Differences in Mortality Between the United States and 7 European Countries
Authors:Karen van Hedel  Mauricio Avendano  Lisa F Berkman  Matthias Bopp  Patrick Deboosere  Olle Lundberg  Pekka Martikainen  Gwenn Menvielle  Frank J van Lenthe  Johan P Mackenbach
Abstract:Objectives. This study examined to what extent the higher mortality in the United States compared to many European countries is explained by larger social disparities within the United States. We estimated the expected US mortality if educational disparities in the United States were similar to those in 7 European countries.Methods. Poisson models were used to quantify the association between education and mortality for men and women aged 30 to 74 years in the United States, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland for the period 1989 to 2003. US data came from the National Health Interview Survey linked to the National Death Index and the European data came from censuses linked to national mortality registries.Results. If people in the United States had the same distribution of education as their European counterparts, the US mortality disadvantage would be larger. However, if educational disparities in mortality within the United States equaled those within Europe, mortality differences between the United States and Europe would be reduced by 20% to 100%.Conclusions. Larger educational disparities in mortality in the United States than in Europe partly explain why US adults have higher mortality than their European counterparts. Policies to reduce mortality among the lower educated will be necessary to bridge the mortality gap between the United States and European countries.The United States has lower life expectancy at birth than most Western European countries. In 2009, life expectancy in the United States was 76 years for men and 81 years for women, between 2 and 4 years less than in several European countries.1 The disadvantage is greater for women than for men and originated in the 1980s.2 The US health disadvantage is found not only for life expectancy, but also for self-reported health measures,3,4 biomarkers,3 and many specific causes of death5,6 across the entire life course.3–5,7A recent report by the National Research Council suggests that smoking and obesity explain an important part of the US mortality disadvantage.2,8,9 However, an approach that solely emphasizes behavioral differences is impoverished by ignoring the role of socioeconomic and environmental determinants.10 A substantial body of research suggests that most behavioral risk factors are socially patterned; lower education or income are associated with a higher prevalence of smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, obesity, and poor dietary patterns.11–19 In addition, European countries and the United States differ in many aspects of the physical and social environment that can affect population health and that are in turn socially patterned within each country. For example, the socioeconomic distribution of access to healthy food differs between countries.20 Social environmental factors related to safety, violence, social connections, social participation, social cohesion, social capital, and collective efficacy have also been shown to influence health and in turn differ between countries and socioeconomic groups.21 Indeed, differences in mortality between the United States and Europe are larger among those with a lower educational level,6 suggesting that larger educational disparities in mortality, which partly coincide with differences in behavior, partly explain why Americans have higher mortality than Europeans.The United States is characterized by relatively higher levels of income inequalities,22 residential and racial segregation,23–25 and financial barriers to health care access2,26 than any European country. Social protection policies and benefits are also less comprehensive in the United States than in Europe, including policies on early education and childcare programs,27 access to high-quality education,28 employment protection and support programs,29,30 and housing29,31 and income transfer programs.31,32 A plausible hypothesis is that the more unequal distribution of resources and less comprehensive policies contribute to the more unfavorable risk factor profile and poorer health of lower-educated Americans as compared with corresponding Europeans.4,33,34 A follow-up report by the National Research Council and the Institute of Medicine published in 2013 concluded that there is a lack of evidence on how these factors explain the US health disadvantage.21 The aim of this article is to assess to what extent larger educational disparities in mortality explain why Americans have higher mortality than Europeans.
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