23 results on '"Rehnberg, Johan"'
Search Results
2. Depends on whom you ask: Discordance in reporting spousal care between older women and men across European welfare states
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Rodrigues, Ricardo, Simmons, Cassandra, Zólyomi, Eszter, Vafaei, Afshin, Rehnberg, Johan, Kadi, Selma, Socci, Marco, Fors, Stefan, and Phillips, Susan P.
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- 2024
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3. Longitudinal associations between sensory and cognitive functioning in adults 60 years or older in Sweden and Denmark
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Badache, Andreea-Corina, Rehnberg, Johan, Mäki-Torkko, Elina, Widen, Stephen, and Fors, Stefan
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- 2024
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4. Gender differences in access to community-based care: a longitudinal analysis of widowhood and living arrangements
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Ilinca, Stefania, Rodrigues, Ricardo, Fors, Stefan, Zólyomi, Eszter, Jull, Janet, Rehnberg, Johan, Vafaei, Afshin, and Phillips, Susan
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- 2022
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5. Cohort-specific disability trajectories among older women and men in Europe 2004–2017
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Fors, Stefan, Illinca, Stefania, Jull, Janet, Kadi, Selma, P Phillips, Susan, Rodrigues, Ricardo, Vafaei, Afshin, Zolyomi, Eszter, and Rehnberg, Johan
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- 2022
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6. A social exclusion perspective on loneliness in older adults in the Nordic countries
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Dahlberg, Lena, McKee, Kevin J., Lennartsson, Carin, and Rehnberg, Johan
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- 2022
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7. Interdependent pathways between socioeconomic position and health: A Swedish longitudinal register-based study
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Rehnberg, Johan, Östergren, Olof, Esser, Ingrid, and Lundberg, Olle
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- 2021
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8. The Association between Education and Cognitive Performance Varies at Different Levels of Cognitive Performance: A Quantile Regression Approach.
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Rehnberg, Johan, Huisman, Martijn, Fors, Stefan, Marseglia, Anna, and Kok, Almar
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COGNITIVE ability , *QUANTILE regression , *COGNITIVE processing speed , *CRYSTALLIZED intelligence , *EDUCATION associations , *EPISODIC memory - Abstract
Introduction: Educational differences in cognitive performance among older adults are well documented. Studies that explore this association typically estimate a single average effect of education on cognitive performance. We argue that the processes that contribute to the association between education and cognitive performance are unlikely to have equal effects at all levels of cognitive performance. In this study, we employ an analytical approach that enables us to go beyond averages to examine the association between education and five measures of global and domain-specific cognitive performance across the outcome distributions. Methods: This cross-sectional study included 1,780 older adults aged 58–68 years from the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam. Conditional quantile regression was used to examine variation across the outcome distribution. Cognitive outcomes included Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score, crystallized intelligence, information processing speed, episodic memory, and a composite score of global cognitive performance. Results: The results showed that the associations between education and different cognitive measures varied across the outcome distributions. Specifically, we found that education had a stronger association with crystallized intelligence, MMSE, and a composite cognitive performance measure in the lower tail of performance distributions. The associations between education and information processing speed and episodic memory were uniform across the outcome distributions. Conclusion: Larger associations between education and some domains of cognitive performance in the lower tail of the performance distributions imply that inequalities are primarily generated among individuals with lower performance rather than among average and high performers. Additionally, the varying associations across some of the outcome distributions indicate that estimating a single average effect through standard regression methods may overlook variations in cognitive performance between educational groups. Future studies should consider heterogeneity across the outcome distribution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. The shape of the association between income and mortality in old age: A longitudinal Swedish national register study
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Rehnberg, Johan and Fritzell, Johan
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- 2016
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10. Can Sex Differences in Old Age Disabilities be Attributed to Socioeconomic Conditions? Evidence from a Mapping Review of the Literature.
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Augustsson, Erika, Rehnberg, Johan, Simmons, Cassandra, Rodrigues, Ricardo, Kadi, Selma, Ilinca, Stefania, Phillips, Susan, and Fors, Stefan
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Old age disabilities are more common among women than men, and adverse socioeconomic conditions are associated with a higher prevalence of disabilities among older adults. The goal of this study was to complete a mapping review of the available evidence assessing the extent to which the observed sex differences in older adults' disabilities can be attributed to sex differences in socioeconomic status. We searched three databases for articles published between 2009 and 2019, and after screening and looking at eligibility criteria, 6 articles were included in the review. For those studies that did not directly analyse the contribution of socioeconomic conditions, we used the 'difference method' to estimate the proportion of the sex gap in disabilities among older adults that could be attributed to socioeconomic conditions. Our review demonstrated that women generally have a higher prevalence of disabilities than men. In several studies, these differences could be partly attributed to sex differences in the distribution of socioeconomic conditions. We also find great elasticity in the magnitude of both the sex gap in disabilities and in the proportion that could be attributed to differences in socioeconomic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Cohort Trajectories by Age and Gender for Informal Caregiving in Europe Adjusted for Sociodemographic Changes, 2004 and 2015.
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Rodrigues, Ricardo, Rehnberg, Johan, Simmons, Cassandra, Ilinca, Stefania, Zólyomi, Eszter, Vafaei, Afshin, Kadi, Selma, Jull, Janet, Phillips, Susan P, and Fors, Stefan
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GENDER role , *AGE distribution , *HEALTH status indicators , *BURDEN of care , *HUMANITY , *AGING , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *RETIREMENT , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Objectives We present a dynamic view of gender patterns in informal caregiving across Europe in a context of sociodemographic transformations. We aim to answer the following research questions: (a) has the gender gap in informal caregiving changed; (b) if so, is this due to changes among women and/or men; and (c) has the gender care gap changed differently across care regimes? Methods Multilevel growth curve models are applied to gendered trajectories of informal caregiving of a panel sample of 50+ Europeans, grouped into 5-year cohorts and followed across 5 waves of the Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe survey, stratified by sex and adjusted for several covariates. Results For men in cohorts born more recently, there is a decrease in the prevalence of informal care outside the household, whereas cohort trajectories for women are mostly stable. Prevalence of care inside the household has increased for later-born cohorts for all without discernible changes to the gender care gap. Gender care gaps overall widened among later-born cohorts in the Continental cluster, whereas they remained constant in Southern Europe, and narrowed in the Nordic cluster. Discussion We discuss the cohort effects found in the context of gender differences in employment and care around retirement age, as well as possible demographic explanations for these. The shift from care outside to inside the household, where it mostly consists of spousal care, may require different policies to support carers, whose age profile and possible care burden seem to be increasing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Disruption and selection: the income gradient in mortality among natives and migrants in Sweden.
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Östergren, Olof, Rehnberg, Johan, Lundberg, Olle, and Miething, Alexander
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NOMADS , *MORTALITY , *AGE distribution , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *INCOME , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *RESEARCH funding , *LABOR market , *POISSON distribution - Abstract
Background The income gradient in mortality is generated through an interplay between socio-economic processes and health over the life course. International migration entails the displacement of an individual from one context to another and may disrupt these processes. Furthermore, migrants are a selected group that may adopt distinct strategies and face discrimination in the labour market. These factors may have implications for the income gradient in mortality. We investigate whether the income gradient in mortality differs by migrant status and by individual-level factors surrounding the migration event. Methods We use administrative register data comprising the total resident population in Sweden aged between 30 and 79 in 2015 (n = 5.7 million) and follow them for mortality during 2015–17. We estimate the income gradient in mortality by migrant status, region of origin, age at migration and country of education using locally estimated scatterplot smoothing and Poisson regression. Results The income gradient in mortality is less steep among migrants compared with natives. This pattern is driven by lower mortality among migrants at lower levels of income. The gradient is less steep among distant migrants than among close migrants, migrants that arrived as adults compared with children and migrants that received their education in Sweden as opposed to abroad. Conclusions Our results are consistent with the notion that income inequalities in mortality are generated through life-course processes that may be disrupted by migration. Data restrictions prevent us from disentangling life-course disruption from selection into migration, discrimination and labour market strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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13. Absolute or relative? A comparative analysis of the relationship between poverty and mortality
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Fritzell, Johan, Rehnberg, Johan, Bacchus Hertzman, Jennie, and Blomgren, Jenni
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- 2015
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14. The association between loneliness, social isolation and all-cause mortality in a nationally representative sample of older women and men.
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Lennartsson, Carin, Rehnberg, Johan, and Dahlberg, Lena
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MORTALITY risk factors ,WELL-being ,REGRESSION analysis ,SOCIAL isolation ,RISK assessment ,LONELINESS ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,QUALITY of life ,OLD age - Abstract
Individuals who feel lonely and those who are socially isolated have higher mortality risks than those who are not lonely or socially isolated. However, the importance of loneliness and social isolation for survival is rarely analysed in the same study or with consideration of gender differences. The aim was to examine the separate, mutually adjusted, and combined effects of loneliness and social isolation with mortality in older women and men. Data from the SWEOLD study, a nationally representative sample of people aged 69+ years living in Sweden, was combined with register data on mortality and analysed using Cox regressions. Mortality was higher among older women and men with higher levels of loneliness or social isolation. Social isolation was more strongly associated with mortality than loneliness and the association remained when controlling for health. The combined effects of loneliness and social isolation did not surpass their independent effects. Loneliness and social isolation is associated with an increased mortality risk, and social integration should be a prioritised target for activities and services involving older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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15. The influence of selective mortality on poverty rates in later life: evidence from a Swedish cohort born in 1926.
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Rehnberg, Johan, Östergren, Olof, Almquist, Ylva B, Fritzell, Johan, and Fors, Stefan
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POVERTY rate , *COHORT analysis , *OLDER people , *DEATH rate , *LIFE expectancy - Abstract
Mortality influences the composition of the surviving population. Higher mortality among low-income individuals than high-income individuals may result in lower poverty rates in the surviving population. The objective of this study was to describe poverty rates for both survivors and deceased individuals in a cohort born in 1926.We used Swedish total population data on the 1926 birth cohort (
n = 83,382), calculating annual poverty rates from 1991 to 2016. We compared poverty rates for the entire cohort, those who died the next year, and those who survived for 5, 10, or 20+ years, measuring the impact of selective mortality as the differences in poverty rates between the cohort and these subgroups.Individuals who died the following year had higher poverty rates than the cohort at ages 65–90. Conversely, individuals who survived 5, 10, or 20+ years had lower poverty rates, with relatively small differences (1.1% to 6.9% lower) for survivors of 5 years or longer, and larger differences (26.4% to 32.8% lower) for those who survived 20+ years.Despite differences in mortality rates by income, selective mortality had only a modest impact on poverty rates. If life expectancy rises for all, and a more diverse population reaches old age, our findings indicate a potential slight increase in poverty rates due to reduced mortality as a selective factor. These findings emphasise the need to consider mortality selection when addressing future poverty rates in older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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16. Excess Mortality by Individual and Spousal Education for Recent and Long-Term Widowed.
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Östergren, Olof, Fors, Stefan, and Rehnberg, Johan
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MORTALITY risk factors ,LIFE change events ,RELATIVE medical risk ,MARRIAGE ,REGRESSION analysis ,HEALTH status indicators ,SPOUSES ,WIDOWHOOD ,DEATH ,LONGITUDINAL method ,POISSON distribution - Abstract
Objectives The loss of a spouse is followed by a dramatic but short-lived increase in the mortality risk of the survivor. Contrary to expectations, several studies have found this increase to be larger among those with high education. Having a spouse with high education is associated with lower mortality, which suggests that losing a spouse with high education means the loss of a stronger protective factor than losing a spouse with low education. This may disproportionately affect the high educated because of educational homogamy. Methods We use Swedish total population registers to construct an open cohort of 1,842,487 married individuals aged 60–89 during 2007–2016, observing 239,276 transitions into widowhood and 277,946 deaths. We use Poisson regression to estimate relative and absolute mortality risks by own and spousal education among the married and recent and long-term widows. Results We find an absolute increase in mortality risk, concentrated to the first 6 months of widowhood across all educational strata. The relative increase in mortality risk is larger in higher educational strata. Losing a spouse with high education is associated with higher excess mortality, which attenuates this difference. Discussion When considering the timing and the absolute level of excess mortality, we find that the overall patterns of excess mortality are similar across educational strata. We argue that widowhood has a dramatic impact on health, regardless of education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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17. One generation apart: Individual income and life expectancy in two Swedish cohorts born before and after the expansion of the welfare state.
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Gurzo, Klara, Rehnberg, Johan, Martikainen, Pekka, and Östergren, Olof
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Social inequalities in mortality persist or even increase in high-income countries. Most evidence is based on a period approach to measuring mortality – that is, data from individuals born decades apart. A cohort approach, however, provides complementary insights using data from individuals who grow up and age under similar social and institutional arrangements. This study compares income inequalities in cohort life expectancy in two Swedish cohorts, one born before and one born after the expansion of the welfare state.Data on individuals born in Sweden in 1922–1926 and 1951–1955 were obtained from total population registries. These data were linked to individual disposable income from 1970 and 1999 and mortality between 50 and 61 years of age in 1972–1987 and 2001–2016, respectively. We calculated cohort temporary life expectancies in the two cohorts by income and gender.Life expectancy, income, and income inequalities in life expectancy increased between the two cohorts, for both men and women. Women born in 1922–1926 had modest income differences in life expectancy, but pronounced differences emerged in the cohort born in 1951–1955. Men with low incomes born in 1951–1955 had roughly similar life expectancy as those with low incomes born in 1922–1926.Compared with a period approach to life expectancy trends, the cohort approach highlights the stagnation of mortality at the lowest income groups for men and the rapid emergence of a mortality gradient for women. Future research on health inequalities in welfare states should consider underlying factors both from a cohort and period perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. What Levels the Association Between Income and Mortality in Later Life: Age or Health Decline?
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Rehnberg, Johan
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AGE distribution , *HEALTH status indicators , *INCOME , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MORTALITY , *POISSON distribution , *REGRESSION analysis , *SURVEYS , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *OLD age - Abstract
Objectives Researchers frequently use the "age-as-leveler" hypothesis to explain decreasing inequality and a weakened relationship between socioeconomic position and health in old age. This study examined whether health status can explain the age pattern in the association between income and mortality as predicted by the age-as-leveler hypothesis. Method This study used longitudinal (1991–2002) data from the SWEOLD and LNU surveys. The analytical sample consisted of 2,619 people aged 54–92 in 2003. Mortality (2003–2014) and income (1991–2000) was collected from Swedish national registers. Poisson regression was used to estimate associations between mortality, income, age, and health status. Average marginal effects were used to visualize interaction effects between income and age. Results The association between income and mortality weakened in those aged 84 and older. However, health status explained a large part of the effect that age had on the association between income and mortality. Analyses done after stratifying the sample by health status showed that the association between income and mortality was strong in people who reported good health and weak or nonexistent in those who reported poor health. Discussion Age leveled the income–mortality association; however, health status, not age, explained most of the leveling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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19. Income trajectories prior to alcohol‐attributable death in Finland and Sweden.
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Tarkiainen, Lasse, Rehnberg, Johan, Martikainen, Pekka, and Fritzell, Johan
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CAUSES of death , *ALCOHOL drinking , *INCOME , *LONGITUDINAL method , *POPULATION geography , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Background and aims: Mortality from alcohol‐attributable causes is patterned by income. We study the income trajectories 17–19 years prior to death in order to determine: (1) whether income levels and trajectories differ between those who die of alcohol‐attributable causes, survivors with similar socio‐demographic characteristics, all survivors and those dying of other causes; (2) whether the income trajectories of these groups differ by education; and (3) whether there are differences in income trajectories between Finland and Sweden—two countries with differing levels of alcohol‐attributable mortality but similar welfare‐provision systems. Design Retrospective cohort study using individual‐level longitudinal register data including information on income, cause of death and socio‐economic status. Setting: Finland and Sweden. Participants: The subjects comprised an 11% sample of the Finnish population in 2006–07 and the total population of Sweden aged 45–64 years in 2007–08. Measurements Median household income trajectories by educational group were calculated by cause of death and population alive during the respective years. Additionally, propensity score matching was used to match the surviving population to those dying from alcohol‐attributable causes with regard to socio‐demographic characteristics. Findings The median income 17–19 years prior to death from alcohol‐attributable causes was 92% (Finland) and 91% (Sweden) of survivor income: 1 year prior to death, the respective figures were 47% and 57%. The trajectories differed substantially. Those dying of alcohol‐attributable causes had lower and decreasing incomes for substantially longer periods than survivors and people dying from other causes. These differences were more modest among the highly educated individuals. The baseline socio‐demographic characteristics of those dying of alcohol causes did not explain the different trajectories. Conclusions: In Finland and Sweden, income appears to decline substantially before alcohol‐attributable death. Highly educated individuals may be able to buffer the negative effects of extensive alcohol use on their income level. Income trajectories are similar in Finland and Sweden, despite marked differences in the level of alcohol‐attributable mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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20. Divergence and Convergence: How Do Income Inequalities in Mortality Change over the Life Course?
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Rehnberg, Johan, Fors, Stefan, and Fritzell, Johan
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HEALTH equity , *INCOME - Abstract
Background: Do inequalities in health by income increase or decrease with age? The empirical evidence is not conclusive and competing theories arrive at different conclusions.Objective: This study examined inequality in mortality by income over the adult life course with longitudinal data on people aged 30-99 between the years 1990 and 2009. Each person was followed for 19 years.Methods: We used Swedish total population data with 5,011,414 individual observations. We calculated the probability of having died for ages between 31 and 99. This approach to calculating death risk incorporates selective mortality during the follow-up period into the measure. Age and year standardized income positions were calculated for all individuals. Inequality was assessed by comparing the top 10% income group and the bottom 10% income group. Relative inequality was measured by risk ratios (RR) and absolute inequality by percentage point differences.Results: The results showed that the highest relative income inequality in mortality was at age 56 for men (RR: 4.7) and at age 40 for women (RR: 4.1) with differing patterns across the younger age categories between the sexes. The highest absolute income inequality in mortality was found at age 78 for men (19% difference) and at age 89 for women (14% difference) with similar patterns for both sexes. Both measures of inequality decreased after the peak, with small or no inequalities above age 95. Income inequality in mortality remained in advanced age, with larger absolute inequalities in older ages and larger relative inequalities in younger ages.Conclusion: The results for absolute and relative measures of inequality differed substantially; this highlights the importance of discussing and making an active choice of inequality measure. To explain and understand the patterns of inequality in mortality over the adult life course, we conclude that the "age-as-leveler" and "cumulative disadvantage" theories are best applied to an absolute measure of inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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21. Shape of the association between income and mortality: a cohort study of Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden in 1995 and 2003.
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Mortensen, Laust H., Rehnberg, Johan, Dahl, Espen, Diderichsen, Finn, Elstad, Jon Ivar, Martikainen, Pekka, Rehkopf, David, Tarkiainen, Lasse, and Fritzell, Johan
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Objectives: Prior work has examined the shape of the income-mortality association, but work has not compared gradients between countries. In this study, we focus on changes over time in the shape of income-mortality gradients for 4 Nordic countries during a period of rising income inequality. Context and time differentials in shape imply that the relationship between income and mortality is not fixed. Setting: Population-based cohort study of Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden. Participants: We collected data on individuals aged 25 or more in 1995 (n=12.98 million individuals, 0.84 million deaths) and 2003 (n=13.08 million individuals, 0.90 million deaths). We then examined the household size equivalised disposable income at the baseline year in relation to the rate of mortality in the following 5 years. Results: A steep income gradient in mortality in men and women across all age groups except the oldest old in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden. From the 1990s to 2000s mortality dropped, but generally more so in the upper part of the income distribution than in the lower part. As a consequence, the shape of the income gradient in mortality changed. The shift in the shape of the association was similar in all 4 countries. Conclusions: A non-linear gradient exists between income and mortality in most cases and because of a more rapid mortality decline among those with high income the income gradient has become steeper over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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22. 20-Year trends in the social participation of the oldest old.
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Augustsson, Erika, Fors, Stefan, Rehnberg, Johan, Lennartsson, Carin, and Agahi, Neda
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SOCIAL participation , *EQUALITY , *DECOMPOSITION method , *PANEL analysis , *EDUCATIONAL change - Abstract
To investigate 20-year trends in social participation among the oldest old (77+ years) in Sweden and assess the extent to which changes in educational attainment and functional abilities explain these trends.Seven waves of the Swedish Panel Study of Living Conditions of the Oldest Old (SWEOLD) spanning 2002–2021 were used with a repeated cross-sectional design. To analyse the association between time and social participation we employed the Karlson–Holm–Breen method of decomposition. The study focused on informal social participation (contact with friends and family), leisure participation (public or semi-public gatherings), and formal participation (organisational engagement and study circle attendance).Both leisure and informal participation peaked in 2014 and declined in 2021, influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic, whereas formal participation showed a slight increase in 2021. Total participation increased at least until 2011. Overall, older adults have increased their levels of social participation in recent decades, disregarding the influence of the pandemic. Decomposition analysis revealed that population-level changes in educational attainment and functional abilities explained a substantial portion of the observed trends.
As the proportion of older adults continues to rise, it becomes increasingly important to understand the developments and drivers of behavioural change in the older population. As more people are socially active, there may be increasing differences between those participating and those not – which could lead to increased inequalities. The observed trend in increasing participation, influenced by changes in education and health, emphasises the importance of fostering age-friendly environments and addressing potential social inequalities among older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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23. BET 3: PULMONARY EMBOLISM RULE-OUT CRITERIA (PERC) FOR EXCLUDING PULMONARY EMBOLISM.
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Rehnberg, Johan Victor
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A short-cut review was carried out to establish whether the pulmonary embolism rule-out criteria (PERC) can safely exclude the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism (PE) in the emergency department (ED). One recent systematic review was directly relevant to the question and incorporated all the other relevant evidence identified. The author, date and country of publication, patient group studied, study type, relevant outcomes, results and study weaknesses of these papers are shown in table 3. The clinical bottom line is that PERC may be safely applied to patients aged 18–49 years presenting to the ED with chest pain and/or dyspnoea providing that the pre-test probability of PE is 7% or less (equivalent to a Wells score of <2). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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