Socioeconomic inequalities in cause-specific mortality in 15 European cities

Marí Dell’Olmo, Marc
Gotsens Miquel, Mercè
Palència Fernàndez, Laia
Burström, Bo
Corman, Diana
Costa, Giuseppe
Deboosere, Patrick
Díez, Èlia
Dzúrová, Dagmar
Gandarillas, Ana
Hoffmann, Rasmus
Kovács, Katalin
Martikainen, Pekka
Demaria, Moreno
Pikhart, Hynek
Rodríguez Sanz, Maica
Santana, Paula
Schwierz, Cornelia
Tarkiainen, Lasse
Borrell, Carme
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Background: Socioeconomic inequalities are increasingly recognised as an important public health issue, although their role in the leading causes of mortality in urban areas in Europe has not been fully evaluated. In this study, we used data from the INEQCITIES study to analyse inequalities in cause-specific mortality in 15 European cities at the beginning of the 21st century. Methods: A cross-sectional ecological study was carried out to analyse 9 of the leading specific causes of death in small areas from 15 European cities. Using a hierarchical Bayesian spatial model, we estimated smoothed Standardized Mortality Ratios, relative risks and 95% credible intervals for cause-specific mortality in relation to a socioeconomic deprivation index, separately for men and women. Results: We detected spatial socioeconomic inequalities for most causes of mortality studied, although these inequalities differed markedly between cities, being more pronounced in Northern and Central-Eastern Europe. In the majority of cities, most of these causes of death were positively associated with deprivation among men, with the exception of prostatic cancer. Among women, diabetes, ischaemic heart disease, chronic liver diseases and respiratory diseases were also positively associated with deprivation in most cities. Lung cancer mortality was positively associated with deprivation in Northern European cities and in Kosice, but this association was non-existent or even negative in Southern European cities. Finally, breast cancer risk was inversely associated with deprivation in three Southern European cities. Conclusions: The results confirm the existence of socioeconomic inequalities in many of the main causes of mortality, and reveal variations in their magnitude between different European cities ​
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