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Título de Acceso Abierto

Visualizing Mortality Dynamics in the Lexis Diagram

Parte de: The Springer Series on Demographic Methods and Population Analysis

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

data; lexis diagram; mortality dynamics; software; Breast cancer; Colorectal cancer; Creative Commons license; Human Mortality Database; Life expectancy; Lung cancer; Seasonality; United States

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Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-319-64818-7

ISBN electrónico

978-3-319-64820-0

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Tabla de contenidos

Introduction: Why Do We Visualize Data and What Is This Book About?

Roland Rau; Christina Bohk-Ewald; Magdalena M. Muszyńska; James W. Vaupel

Introduction: Why do we visualize data and what is this book about? The introductory chapter describes the three rationales to visualize data: exploration, confirmation and presentation, and discusses the developments in computer hardware, software and connectivity that were instrumental for the recent increased interest in visualizing data.

Pp. 1-4

The Lexis Diagram

Roland Rau; Christina Bohk-Ewald; Magdalena M. Muszyńska; James W. Vaupel

The second chapter specifies how a Lexis diagram is constructed and shows that cohorts are depicted on the 45 line. It briefly discusses the so-called identification problem of standard methods of age-, period-, and cohort analysis and explains how those effects look like in the Lexis diagram. The chapter concludes with a brief history of the depiction of population dynamics in three dimensions.

Pp. 5-10

Data and Software

Roland Rau; Christina Bohk-Ewald; Magdalena M. Muszyńska; James W. Vaupel

This chapter describes the major data sets used in this monograph: The Human Mortality Database, data from the National Center for Health Statistics of the United States for the analysis of causes of death, and the individual-level, longitudinal data of the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) program of the National Cancer Institute of the United States. The latter is used to illustrate the dynamics of cancer survival.

Pp. 11-16

Surface Plots of Observed Death Rates

Roland Rau; Christina Bohk-Ewald; Magdalena M. Muszyńska; James W. Vaupel

The chapter on observed death rates illustrates why demographic rates need to be adjusted by the number of person years lived and shows surface maps of such “raw” death rates for a few selected national populations. One can easily see that random fluctuations can turn out be problematic for smaller populations as they may lead to misinterpretations.

Pp. 17-27

Surface Plots of Smoothed Mortality Data

Roland Rau; Christina Bohk-Ewald; Magdalena M. Muszyńska; James W. Vaupel

The surface maps of the previous chapter showed that random fluctuations can be quite large. The present chapter on smoothing mortality data explains how we smoothed the observed mortality with P-splines. We illustrate our smoothing results with the same set of countries as in the previous chapter for unsmoothed data.

Pp. 29-41

Surface Plots of Rates of Mortality Improvement

Roland Rau; Christina Bohk-Ewald; Magdalena M. Muszyńska; James W. Vaupel

Surface maps of unsmoothed and smoothed mortality data have been used widely before. In this chapter, we present surface plots of rates of mortality improvement (“ROMI”), which are the derivative of age-specific mortality with respect to time. They have been introduced rather recently. By showing a large set of surface maps for countries from the Human Mortality Database, we argue that those ROMI plots are better able to detect period and cohort effects than standard mortality surface maps.

Pp. 43-67

Surface Plots of Rates of Mortality Improvement for Selected Causes of Death in the United States

Roland Rau; Christina Bohk-Ewald; Magdalena M. Muszyńska; James W. Vaupel

This chapter shows that ROMI plots, as presented in the previous chapter, can not only be employed for mortality from all-causes but also for cause-specific mortality. They allow us to demonstrate that the slow increase in life expectancy among women in the United States during the 1980s and 1990s can not be attributed to heart diseases or stroke. Instead, mortality from respiratory diseases and from lung cancer, the latter featuring a pronounced cohort effect, suppressed faster gains in life expectancy.

Pp. 69-80

Surface Plots of Age-Specific Contributions to the Increase in Life Expectancy

Roland Rau; Christina Bohk-Ewald; Magdalena M. Muszyńska; James W. Vaupel

Rates of mortality improvement, as presented in the previous two chapters, are an excellent tool to illustrate mortality dynamics. They can not be directly translated to contributions to changes in life expectancy. Using Arriaga’s decomposition approach, we plot maps for selected countries from the Human Mortality Database, showing which ages contributed most to the respective change in life expectanc over time.

Pp. 81-97

Seasonality of Causes of Death

Roland Rau; Christina Bohk-Ewald; Magdalena M. Muszyńska; James W. Vaupel

Many causes of death have a clear seasonal pattern. Circulatory and respiratory diseases, which comprise about half of all deaths, have a peak in winter and lowest mortality during summer. Data by cause of death, age, and calendar time (month and year) provided by the National Center for Health Statistics allow an analysis how seasonality has changed over age and time. Using a two-dimensional decomposition and smoothing approach, we show how the amplitude and the phase of selected causes of death have developed since the late 1950s.

Pp. 99-122

Surface Plots for Cancer Survival

Roland Rau; Christina Bohk-Ewald; Magdalena M. Muszyńska; James W. Vaupel

While previous chapters focused only on the event of death, this chapter investigates the dynamics over age and time for the duration between being diagnosed with a specific cancer and death. We use five year survival as our indicator of survival in general, disease-specific survival and relative survival for selected cancer sites such as breast cancer, colorectal cancer, lung cancer or pancreatic cancer. The major impact of the stage of the tumor at the time of diagnosis for survival is illustrated using stage 1 and stage 4 of colorectal cancer as an example.

Pp. 123-138