Research report
Changing mortality patterns in East and West Germany and Poland.
II: Short-term trends during transition and in the 1990s
Ellen Noltea, Vladimir Shkolnikovb, Martin McKeea
a European Centre on
Health of Societies in Transition, London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine, Keppel Street, London WC1E 7HT, b Centre of Demography and Human
Ecology, Institute for Economic Forecasting, Moscow, Russian Federation
Correspondence to: Ellen Nolte (ellen.nolte{at}lshtm.ac.uk)
Accepted for publication 3 April 2000
OBJECTIVES
To examine
trends in life expectancy at birth and age and cause specific patterns
of mortality in the former German Democratic Republic (GDR) and Poland
during political transition and throughout the 1990s in both parts of
Germany and in Poland.
METHODS
Decomposition
of life expectancy by age and cause of death. Changes in life
expectancy during transition by cause of death were examined using data
for 1988/89 and 1990/91 for the former GDR and Poland; examination of
life expectancy changes after transition were based on 1992-97 data
for Germany and 1991-96 data for Poland.
RESULTS
In both the
former GDR and Poland male life expectancy at birth declined by almost
one year during transition, mainly attributable to rising death rates
from external causes and circulatory diseases. Female life expectancy
in Poland deteriorated by 0.3 years, largely attributable to increasing
circulatory mortality among the old, while in East German female rising
death rates in children and young adults were nearly outbalanced by
declining circulatory mortality among those over 70. Between 1991/92
and 1996/97, male life expectancy at birth increased by 2.4 years in
the former GDR, 1.2 years in old Federal Republic, and 2.0 years in
Poland (women: 2.3, 0.9, and 1.2 years). In East Germany and Poland, the overall improvement was largely attributable to falling mortality among men aged 40-64, while those over 65 contributed the largest proportion to life expectancy gains in women. The change in deaths among men aged 15-39 accounted for 0.4 of a year to life expectancy at
birth in East Germany and Poland, attributable largely to greater decreases from external causes. Among those over 40, absolute contributions to changing life expectancy were greater in the former
GDR than in the other two entities in both sexes, largely attributable
to circulatory diseases. A persisting East-west life expectancy gap in
Germany of 2.1 years in men in 1997 was largely attributable to
external causes, diseases of the digestive system and circulatory
diseases. Higher death rates from circulatory diseases among the
elderly largely explain the female life expectancy gap of approximately
one year.
CONCLUSIONS
This study
provides further insights into the health effects of political
transition. Post-transition improvements in life expectancy and
mortality have been much steeper in East Germany compared with Poland.
Changes in dietary pattern and, in Germany, medical care may have been
important factors in shaping post-transition mortality trends.
Keywords: mortality trends; Germany; Poland; transition
© 2000 by Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
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