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Mortality in alcohol-related diseases in Sweden during 1971-80 in relation to occupation, marital status and citizenship in 1970.

Authors :
Agren G
Romelsjö A
Source :
Scandinavian journal of social medicine [Scand J Soc Med] 1992 Sep; Vol. 20 (3), pp. 134-42.
Publication Year :
1992

Abstract

A new Swedish population register, created by linking Census data to the Cause of Death Registry and covering over 99% of the population, has been used to study the relationship between occupational category, marital status and citizenship in 1970 and mortality in closely alcohol-related diseases during 1971-1980 for the ages 25-64 years. Age-standardized rate ratios (SRR) have been computed for mortality in alcoholism, alcohol intoxication and alcohol psychosis ("AAA") and in liver cirrhosis. SRR-values for both diagnose categories and both sexes were higher than average among not gainfully employed (SRR = 3.71 among males and SRR = 1.96 among females in 1976-80 for "AAA"), among employees in the service sector, engine-drivers and unskilled workers and increased in liver cirrhosis among artists and authors. Among females there were smaller variations in mortality for occupational groups than among males. The SRR-values showed a tendency to be higher in 1976-80 than in 1971-75, probably due to health-related selection to some extent. The alcohol-related mortality was also increased among divorced, widows (SRR = 1.37 for "AAA" and 2.81 for liver cirrhosis in 1976-80) and widowers and among never married males. SRR was much higher among Finnish citizens in Sweden (SRR for "AAA" = 3.85 among males and 2.35 among females in 1976-80) than among males and females living in Finland (SRR for "AAA" = 1.13 among males and 0.36 among females) and also higher than among immigrants from other countries, summed (SRR for "AAA" = 0.62 among males and 0.64 among females).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0300-8037
Volume :
20
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Scandinavian journal of social medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
1485149
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/140349489202000302