Scandinavian Journal of Public Health
Volume 20, Issue 3, 1992, Pages 134-142

Mortality in Alcohol-Related Diseases in Sweden During 1971-80 in Relation to Occupation, Marital Status and Citizenship in 1970 (Article)

Ågren G. , Romelsjö A.*
  • a Karolinska Institute, Department of Social Medicine, Kronan Health Centre, S-172 83 Sundbyberg, Sweden
  • b Karolinska Institute, Department of Social Medicine, Kronan Health Centre, S-172 83 Sundbyberg, Sweden

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). The social distribution of mortality in “AAA” and in liver cirrhosis was similar. The new register could be a valuable tool for epidemiological studies and for health planning, as the participation rate is exteremely high, and as information about occupation and other social factors were collected prior to mortality. © 1992, SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

Alcoholism immigrants liver cirrhosis Epidemiology social factors Mortality

Index Keywords

unemployment immigrant Finland liver cirrhosis sex ratio human social aspect priority journal alcoholism marriage Sweden health program male occupation alcohol psychosis female Article major clinical study adult alcohol abuse alcohol intoxication mortality

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84970100959&doi=10.1177%2f140349489202000302&partnerID=40&md5=347f0917997654472ad1f94c8251cb59

DOI: 10.1177/140349489202000302
ISSN: 14034948
Cited by: 26
Original Language: English