Prospective register-based study of the impact of immigration on educational inequalities in mortality in Norway
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2015-04-11Metadata
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Elstad, J. I., Øverbye, E., & Dahl, E. (2015). Prospective register-based study of the impact of immigration on educational inequalities in mortality in Norway. BMC public health, 15(1), 364. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-015-1717-2Abstract
Background: Differences in mortality with regard to socioeconomic status have widened in recent decades in
many European countries, including Norway. A rapid upsurge of immigration to Norway has occurred since
the 1990s. The article investigates the impact of immigration on educational mortality differences among adults
in Norway.
Methods: Two linked register-based data sets are analyzed; the first consists of all registered inhabitants aged
20–69 in Norway January 1, 1993 (2.6 millions), and the second of all registered inhabitants aged 20–69 as of
January 1, 2008 (2.8 millions). Deaths 1993–1996 and 2008–2011, respectively, immigrant status, and other background
information are available in the data. Mortality is examined by Cox regression analyses and by estimations of
age-adjusted deaths per 100,000 personyears.
Results: Both relative and absolute educational inequality in mortality increased from the 1993–1996 period to
2008–2011, but overall mortality levels went down during these years. Immigrants in general, and almost all the
analyzed immigrant subcategories, had lower mortality than the native majority. This was due to comparatively
low mortality among lower educated immigrants, while mortality among higher educated immigrants was similar
to the mortality level of highly educated natives.
Conclusions: The widening of educational inequality in mortality during the 1990s and 2000s in Norway was not
due to immigration. Immigration rather contributed to slightly lower overall mortality in the population and a less
steep educational gradient in mortality.