Abstract

BackgroundFrom 1982 to 2010, the country’s crude death rate (CDR) dropped sharply, fluctuated, and finally slightly declined. There is a big difference in CDR between urban and rural areas. From 1982 to 1990, the CDR in the country and the countryside declined, and the CDR in cities and towns rose. After 1990, the CDR in cities gradually decreased, the CDR in towns first fell and then rose, and the CDR in the countryside steadily increased. The CDR is affected by changes in the age-specific death rate (ASDR) and age structure.MethodsThis paper decomposes CDR changes into the influence of declines in ASDR and the impact of age structure changes based on 1982, 1990, 2000, and 2010 census data.ResultsThe decline in ASDR reduces the CDR, and the aging population increases the CDR (including cities, towns, and the countryside). At the same time, decomposing the difference between the countryside and cities (or the countryside and towns) CDRs found that after 1990, the influence of ASDR differences and age structure differences increased with time. Our results revealed a more significant effect of ASDR differences. The combined effect of two factors (ASDR and age structure) makes the 0, 1–14, 15–64 age groups reduce the CDR, and the 65+ age group increases the CDR. In addition, the 0-year-old group has a not negligible impact on the changes in CDR, although it accounts for a small proportion of the total population.ConclusionsThe influence of ASDR and age structure differs over time (1982 to 1990, 1990 to 2000, and 2000 to 2010) and across regions (cities, towns, the countryside). Considering the slow decline in ASDR and the accelerated aging population, we can infer that the CDR in 2020 will stabilize or even rise slightly instead of dropping significantly (compared with the CDR in 2010). This study provides a basis for the formulation of relevant public health policies.

Highlights

  • From 1982 to 2010, the country’s crude death rate (CDR) dropped sharply, fluctuated, and slightly declined

  • It is vital to analyze how age-specific death rate (ASDR) and age structure affects the change in CDR, which can be achieved by the decomposition method

  • Drawing on the decomposition method employed by Kitagawa [19], Das Gupta [20], and Canudas Romo [21], this article decomposes the change in CDR into two parts: the influence of age structure changes and ASDR changes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

From 1982 to 2010, the country’s crude death rate (CDR) dropped sharply, fluctuated, and slightly declined. The CDR is affected by changes in the age-specific death rate (ASDR) and age structure. The CDR is called “crude” because the denominator of the indicator includes people of all ages, but the death rate varies by age. The CDR is a function of age-specific death rate (ASDR) and age structure. Due to the aging population in more developed countries, the proportion of older adults is comparatively high, and its CDR is about 11 deaths per 1000 population [2]. The CDR of less developed and least developed countries with relatively young people is only 7 deaths per 1000 population [2]. It is vital to analyze how ASDR and age structure affects the change in CDR, which can be achieved by the decomposition method

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call