Volume 51 - Article 44 | Pages 1411–1428
Analyzing regional patterns of mortality data quality and adult mortality for small areas in Brazil, 1980–2010
By Everton Lima, Bernardo Lanza Queiroz, Flavio Freire, Marcos Gonzaga
Abstract
Background: Brazil’s profound regional social inequalities raise concerns about their impact on adult mortality and data quality. Although the quality of mortality data has improved in recent decades, substantial regional disparities in death registration and mortality rates persist.
Objective: Our study examines the spatial and temporal trends in death record quality and adult mortality across Brazil’s small regions from 1980 to 2010. It assesses whether adult mortality rates are converging or diverging and whether the vital registration system is progressively improving.
Methods: Utilizing mortality data and census records, we adopt a two-step approach. First, we evaluate data quality and calculate adult mortality estimates across subnational microregions using death distribution methods and TOPALS regression. Second, we employ bivariate choropleth mapping to explore the relationship between adult mortality and socioeconomic factors, measured across 558 microregions and disaggregated by sex.
Results: Our findings highlight regional and temporal evolution of completeness of death count coverage. Results show that social inequality is a key factor driving regional disparities in adult mortality. Additionally, assessing and adjusting for the under-registration of death counts is crucial for understanding the spatial relationship between adult mortality and the distribution of socioeconomic inequality.
Contribution: We propose an approach combining demographic and statistical methods to evaluate data quality and produce adult mortality estimates for countries with limited data. We demonstrate how data quality evolves over time and how it varies by gender and region. This research offers a practical method for assessing data quality in small areas and estimating adult mortality in countries with data limitations, and it provides insights for policymakers aiming to reduce regional mortality disparities.
Author's Affiliation
- Everton Lima - Universidade Estadual de Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil EMAIL
- Bernardo Lanza Queiroz - Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG), Brazil EMAIL
- Flavio Freire - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte (UFRN), Brazil EMAIL
- Marcos Gonzaga - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte (UFRN), Brazil EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Data errors in mortality estimation: Formal demographic analysis of under-registration, under-enumeration, and age misreporting
Volume 51 - Article 9
Racial classification as a multistate process
Volume 50 - Article 17
The relation between cardiovascular mortality and development: Study for small areas in Brazil, 2001–2015
Volume 41 - Article 51
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
Racial classification as a multistate process
Volume 50 - Article 17
| Keywords:
Brazil,
demography,
increments to life,
life expectancy,
life table,
mortality,
multistate,
race/ethnicity
Age reporting for the oldest old in the Brazilian COVID-19 vaccination database: What can we learn from it?
Volume 48 - Article 28
| Keywords:
age misreporting,
Brazil,
COVID-19,
mortality crossover,
oldest old,
population aging,
vaccinations
Does race response shift impact racial inequality?
Volume 47 - Article 30
| Keywords:
Brazil,
earnings,
income,
race/ethnicity,
racial inequality
Small-area estimates from consumer trace data
Volume 47 - Article 27
| Keywords:
calibration techniques,
consumer data,
nontraditional data,
small area estimation
Educational pairings and fertility decline in Brazil: An analysis using cohort fertility
Volume 46 - Article 6
| Keywords:
Brazil,
cohort fertility,
educational pairings,
fertility transition
Cited References: 44
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar