Excess Mortality among Blacks and Whites in the United States
Arline T. Geronimus, Sc.D., John Bound, Ph.D., Timothy A. Waidmann, Ph.D., Marianne M. Hillemeier, M.S.N., P.N.P., M.P.H., and Patricia B. Burns, M.P.H.
Background Although the general relations between race, socioeconomicstatus, and mortality in the United States are well known, specificpatterns of excess mortality are not well understood.
Methods Using standard demographic techniques, we analyzed deathcertificates and census data and made sex-specific population-levelestimates of the 1990 death rates for people 15 to 64 yearsof age. We studied mortality among blacks in selected areasof New York City, Detroit, Los Angeles, and Alabama (in onearea of persistent poverty and one higher-income area each)and among whites in areas of New York City, metropolitan Detroit,Kentucky, and Alabama (one area of poverty and one higher-incomearea each). Sixteen areas were studied in all.
Results When they were compared with the nationwide age-standardizedannual death rate for whites, the death rates for both sexesin each of the poverty areas were excessive, especially amongblacks (standardized mortality ratios for men and women in Harlem,4.11 and 3.38; in Watts, 2.92 and 2.60; in central Detroit,2.79 and 2.58; and in the Black Belt area of Alabama, 1.81 and1.89). Boys in Harlem who reached the age of 15 had a 37 percentchance of surviving to the age of 65; for girls, the likelihoodwas 65 percent. Of the higher-income black areas studied, QueensBronxhad the income level most similar to that of whites and thelowest standardized mortality ratios (men, 1.18; women, 1.08).Of the areas where poor whites were studied, Detroit had thehighest standardized mortality ratios (men, 2.01; women, 1.90).On the Lower East Side of Manhattan, in Appalachia, and in NortheastAlabama, the ratios for whites were below the national averagefor blacks (men, 1.90; women, 1.95).
Conclusions Although differences in mortality rates before theage of 65 between advantaged and disadvantaged groups in theUnited States are sometimes vast, there are important differencesamong impoverished communities in patterns of excess mortality.
Source Information
From the Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, School of Public Health (A.T.G., P.B.B.), the Population Studies Center (A.T.G., J.B., M.M.H.), and the Departments of Economics (J.B.) and Sociology (M.M.H.), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; the National Bureau for Economic Research, Cambridge, Mass. (J.B.); and the Urban Institute Health Policy Center, Washington, D.C. (T.A.W.).
Address reprint requests to Dr. Geronimus at the Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, University of Michigan School of Public Health, 1420 Washington Heights, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2029.
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