Correlation of all cause mortality levels at ages 55–69 with all cause mortality levels at ages 80–89, for men and women born to the centralised birth cohorts 1895–1910 among seven European countries, stratified by sex
Stratified by: | Correlation of mortality levels | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total | (N) | Men | (N) | Women | (N) | |
*Correlation is significant at the 0.05 level (two tailed); **correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (two tailed); †too few observations. | ||||||
All | 0.90** | (56) | 0.52** | (28) | 0.83** | (28) |
Centralised birth cohort 1895 | 0.91** | (14) | 0.88** | (7) | 0.87* | (7) |
Centralised birth cohort 1900 | 0.93** | (14) | 0.85* | (7) | 0.89** | (7) |
Centralised birth cohort 1905 | 0.90** | (14) | 0.40 | (7) | 0.65 | (7) |
Centralised birth cohort 1910 | 0.90** | (14) | 0.22 | (7) | 0.52 | (7) |
Denmark | 0.99** | (8) | † | (4) | † | (4) |
England and Wales | 0.96** | (8) | † | (4) | † | (4) |
Finland | 0.99** | (8) | † | (4) | † | (4) |
France | 0.94** | (8) | † | (4) | † | (4) |
Netherlands | 0.99** | (8) | † | (4) | † | (4) |
Norway | 0.99** | (8) | † | (4) | † | (4) |
Sweden | 0.99** | (8) | † | (4) | † | (4) |