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Modelling Cohort Seasonal Mortality Effects in a Compositional Framework

In the late 20th century, the average age at death for Danes and Austrians aged 50 or above andborn in the Spring was approximately 6 months older than those born in the Autumn (Doblhammerand Vaupel, 2001). The pattern was reversed for native-born Australians but, using British migrantsto Australia as a natural experiment, these authors showed that the latter retained the northernhemisphere pattern indicating that it must have been an ‘early life’ effect. This indicates that thehuman body can experience damage or selection in early life that can be expressed as a mortality risk50 or more years later. The problem is that month of birth is simply an indicator. We do not know ifthese effects occured during pregnancy or after birth. Those born in the Spring were in utero duringthe winter, which may have been bad for the mother’s health and therefore their own development,but they also experienced the Spring peak in infant respiratory infections. Bengtsson and Lindstr¨om(2003) used historic data for southern Sweden to show that mortality risk after the age of 50 washigher if the person was born in a year with above average infant mortality. This suggests that, onbalance, the survivors of a bad year were not more robust (selection) but had been damaged by theexperience (debility).The overall purpose of this research is to analyse Danish infant mortality by month of birthand month of age between 1925 and 1945 and to link this experience to the mortality risk of thesurvivors after 1953, based on individual death records of Danes which give age, sex and cause ofdeath. The hypothesis is that individuals who lived through months of high infant mortality will havehigher mortality risks at older ages and, second, that their deaths may be concentrated within therespiratory causes. There are also reasons to expect that any additional mortality risk will be higher ifthey were aged 6–12 months during a dangerous period rather than ages 0–6 months when they wereprotected by maternal immunity. The amplitude of monthly variation in mortality of newborn infantswas low but increased to a peak when months in the late Spring interacted with ages 6–12 months.The first purpose of this paper is to explore a compositional approach to the perturbation thattakes place in mortality during the first year of life with respect to month of age and time. Indicatorsof the seasonal concentration of mortality are frequently based on data aggregated into weeks ormonths and expressed as proportions of the annual total so the compositional approach is natural.The second, and more speculative, purpose is to link a set of evolving compositions in early life effectsto the mortality outcomes of adult cohorts

Universitat de Girona. Departament d’Informàtica i Matemàtica Aplicada

Other contributions: Universitat de Girona. Departament d’Informàtica i Matemàtica Aplicada
Author: Oeppen, Jim
Abstract: In the late 20th century, the average age at death for Danes and Austrians aged 50 or above andborn in the Spring was approximately 6 months older than those born in the Autumn (Doblhammerand Vaupel, 2001). The pattern was reversed for native-born Australians but, using British migrantsto Australia as a natural experiment, these authors showed that the latter retained the northernhemisphere pattern indicating that it must have been an ‘early life’ effect. This indicates that thehuman body can experience damage or selection in early life that can be expressed as a mortality risk50 or more years later. The problem is that month of birth is simply an indicator. We do not know ifthese effects occured during pregnancy or after birth. Those born in the Spring were in utero duringthe winter, which may have been bad for the mother’s health and therefore their own development,but they also experienced the Spring peak in infant respiratory infections. Bengtsson and Lindstr¨om(2003) used historic data for southern Sweden to show that mortality risk after the age of 50 washigher if the person was born in a year with above average infant mortality. This suggests that, onbalance, the survivors of a bad year were not more robust (selection) but had been damaged by theexperience (debility).The overall purpose of this research is to analyse Danish infant mortality by month of birthand month of age between 1925 and 1945 and to link this experience to the mortality risk of thesurvivors after 1953, based on individual death records of Danes which give age, sex and cause ofdeath. The hypothesis is that individuals who lived through months of high infant mortality will havehigher mortality risks at older ages and, second, that their deaths may be concentrated within therespiratory causes. There are also reasons to expect that any additional mortality risk will be higher ifthey were aged 6–12 months during a dangerous period rather than ages 0–6 months when they wereprotected by maternal immunity. The amplitude of monthly variation in mortality of newborn infantswas low but increased to a peak when months in the late Spring interacted with ages 6–12 months.The first purpose of this paper is to explore a compositional approach to the perturbation thattakes place in mortality during the first year of life with respect to month of age and time. Indicatorsof the seasonal concentration of mortality are frequently based on data aggregated into weeks ormonths and expressed as proportions of the annual total so the compositional approach is natural.The second, and more speculative, purpose is to link a set of evolving compositions in early life effectsto the mortality outcomes of adult cohorts
Document access: http://hdl.handle.net/2072/273428
Language: eng
Publisher: Universitat de Girona. Departament d’Informàtica i Matemàtica Aplicada
Rights: Tots els drets reservats
Subject: Anàlisi multivariable -- Congressos
Multivariate analysis -- Congresses
Estadística matemàtica -- Congressos
Mathematical statistics -- Congresses
Infants -- Mortalitat -- Dinamarca -- Congressos
Children -- Mortality -- Denmark -- Congresses
Title: Modelling Cohort Seasonal Mortality Effects in a Compositional Framework
Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
Repository: Recercat

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