TY - JOUR
T1 - Mortality deceleration is not informative of unobserved heterogeneity in open groups
AU - Wrigley-Field, Elizabeth
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Studies of mortality deceleration sometimes use the order of deceleration between two groups-such as birth cohorts or subpopulations defined by race or sex-to draw conclusions about population heterogeneity. These studies often draw on the fact that between two closed groups, ceteris paribus, the higher-mortality group will decelerate at a younger age. This paper gives a first consideration to the order of deceleration between open groups. I construct a model with a one-way flow from 'healthy' to 'sick' status and, crucially, assume that a subset of the cohort has elevated risk for both sickness and death. Using simulations designed to resemble, in the aggregate, cohorts in the Human Mortality Database, I show that mortality deceleration order in such a cohort is essentially unpredictable because it depends on the interaction between a large number of parameters, some of which are unobserved in empirical data. These results suggest that it may be challenging to extend the study of mortality deceleration to include open groups whose memberships are selected for frailty or robustness, while still drawing meaningful conclusions about population heterogeneity.
AB - Studies of mortality deceleration sometimes use the order of deceleration between two groups-such as birth cohorts or subpopulations defined by race or sex-to draw conclusions about population heterogeneity. These studies often draw on the fact that between two closed groups, ceteris paribus, the higher-mortality group will decelerate at a younger age. This paper gives a first consideration to the order of deceleration between open groups. I construct a model with a one-way flow from 'healthy' to 'sick' status and, crucially, assume that a subset of the cohort has elevated risk for both sickness and death. Using simulations designed to resemble, in the aggregate, cohorts in the Human Mortality Database, I show that mortality deceleration order in such a cohort is essentially unpredictable because it depends on the interaction between a large number of parameters, some of which are unobserved in empirical data. These results suggest that it may be challenging to extend the study of mortality deceleration to include open groups whose memberships are selected for frailty or robustness, while still drawing meaningful conclusions about population heterogeneity.
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U2 - 10.1553/populationyearbook2013s15
DO - 10.1553/populationyearbook2013s15
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84899690931
SN - 1728-4414
VL - 11
SP - 15
EP - 36
JO - Vienna Yearbook of Population Research
JF - Vienna Yearbook of Population Research
IS - 1
ER -