Global Inequalities in Youth Mortality, 2007-2012

Authors

  • Gopal K. Singh, PhD The Center for Global Health and Health Policy, Global Health and Education Projects, Riverdale, Maryland 20738, USA
  • Anagha Lokhande The Center for Global Health and Health Policy, Global Health and Education Projects, Riverdale, Maryland 20738, USA
  • Romuladus E. Azuine, DrPH, RN Richard Montgomery High School, 250 Richard Montgomery Drive, Rockville, Maryland 20852, USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21106/ijma.38

Abstract

Objectives:  There is limited cross-national research on youth mortality.  We examined age- and gender variations in all-cause mortality among youth aged 15-34 years across 52 countries.

Methods:  Using the 2014 WHO mortality database, mortality rates for all countries were computed for the latest available year between 2007 and 2012. Rates, rate ratios, and ordinary least squares (OLS) and Poisson regression were used to analyze international variation in mortality.

Results:  Mortality rates among youth aged 15-34 years varied from a low of 28.4 deaths per 100,000 population for Hong Kong to a high of 250.6 for Russia and 619.1 for South Africa. For men aged 15-34, Singapore and Hong Kong had the lowest mortality rates (?40 per 100,000), compared with South Africa and Russia with rates of 589.7 and 383.3, respectively. Global patterns in mortality among women were similar. Youth aged 15-24 in South Africa had 14 times higher mortality and those in the Philippines, Mexico, Russia, Colombia, and Brazil had 5-7 times higher mortality than those in Hong Kong. Youth aged 25-34 in Russia and South Africa had, respectively, 10 and 29 times higher mortality than their counterparts in Hong Kong. United States (US) had the 12th highest mortality rate among youth aged 15-24 and the 13th highest rate among youth aged 25-34. Overall, the US youth had 2-3 times higher rates of mortality than their counterparts in many industrialized countries including Hong Kong, Singapore, Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany, Norway, and Sweden. Income inequality, unemployment rate, and human development explained 50-66% of the global variance in youth mortality. Compared to the countries with low unemployment and income inequality and high human development levels, countries with high unemployment and income inequality and low human development had, respectively, 343%, 213%, and 205% higher risks of youth mortality.

Conclusions and Global Health Implications:  Marked international disparities in youth all-cause mortality largely reflect differences in violence and injury deaths and in such risk factors as unemployment, income inequality, human development, and alcohol consumption.  The US ranks in the upper quartile of all-cause mortality, with youth in Canada and many western industrialized countries showing significantly lower mortality risks than the US youth.

Key words: Youth mortality • Human development • Global pattern • Unemployment • Inequality

Copyright © 2015 Singh et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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