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Effect of education and marital status on premature mortality among urban adults in Poland, 1988–1989

✍ Scribed by Zygmunt Welon; Tadeusz Bielicki; Elzbieta Rogucka; Robert M. Malina


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
61 KB
Volume
11
Category
Article
ISSN
1042-0533

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✦ Synopsis


Mortality rates among adults 25-64 years of age (premature mortality) in 1988 and 1989 were compared by educational status (a fourlevel scale) and marital status (married vs. nonmarried) in three Polish cities situated in ecologically different regions of Poland. Each of the two social factors has a significant influence on mortality after the effect of the other is controlled statistically. The risk of premature death increases regularly with an individual's decreasing position on the educational scale; also, the risk is higher among nonmarried than among married persons. This is true in all three urban populations, at all age levels considered, and in both genders. However, the effects of education and of marital status on premature mortality are more dramatic in males than in females. At middle age, the condition of having no spouse and of being poorly educated each expose males to a greater risk of premature mortality than females.