Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Doctor of Philosophy |
Title | The epidemiological transition in mainland China |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 1999 |
URL | http://hub.hku.hk/bitstream/10722/36047/1/FullText.pdf?accept=1 |
Abstract | A significant shift in cause-of-death structure has occurred in China duxkg the past half century. As elsewhere, this shift in mortality pattern has been referred to as the epidemiological transition. A review of the literature showed that systematic studies on epidemiological transition in developing countries were limited but especially those of China. The literature also indicated that such studies were necessary tofixllyunderstand the process of population aging and fixture health trends in these comitries. The present study was designed to fill this knowledge gap. Its conceptual framework was based on the epidemiological transition theory developed by Omran and related views by others. The literature review distinguishes at least three epidemiological transitions,that is,the shift in leading causes of death from famine to commimicable diseases (the first transition), firom commimicable to nonconmimicable diseases (the second transition) and from one set of noncoimnimicable diseases to another (the third transition). Moreover, four basic components of epidemiological change were identified to evaluate each transition, including shift in causes of deatli,its nature, chaages in age and sex mortality patterns and effects of a transition on survival. The study is a secondary data analysis. Two analytical approaches —~ timeseries analysis and cross-sectional analysis ? were employed. The mortality measures used were mainly life table functions. The data for time-series analysis were available national time-series mortality data reconstructed by others and those for crosssectional analysis were China's mortality data of 1993 which came from the death reporting system run by National Health Statistics Information Center. The quality of data was assessed and found to be broadly reliable and some necessary adjustments were made. This study focused on the second epidemiological transition. The fijadings showed that the broad trend in China tended to be similar to that in developed countries. However,the process of the transition was quite different from that in developed countries in many aspects,such as pace,timing and patterns of changes k mortality level and causes of death, because of differences in the relative effects of various factors affecting mortality and their historical changes. The results suggested that during the shift from communicable to noncommimicable diseases in China, the proportion of deaths from some povertyrelated noncommimicable diseases first rose and then declined. The rise of relative importance of noncoinmxMiicable diseases was largely caused by more rapid disappearance of communicable diseases (relative effect) and increased survival chance (demographic effect). It was also affected by rapid rise of death rates from some so-called diseases of affluence (absolute effect) especially in the later stages of the transition. The transition favored females over males,children and young adults over the old and rich over poor regions. The age distribution of death was shifting towards older ages,which was mainly affected by the cause-of-death transformation in the initial stages and by the delays of age at deatli from noncommimicable diseases in the later stages ofthe transition. In sum, the study was usefiil for developing some patterns of epidemiological transition m developing countries. Some prospects for fixture mortality trends, kcqplications of the transition and limitations oftbe study were also discussed |
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