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Social science & medicine · Apr 2015
Does higher income inequality adversely influence infant mortality rates? Reconciling descriptive patterns and recent research findings.
- Arjumand Siddiqi, Marcella K Jones, and Paul Campbell Erwin.
- Departments of Epidemiology and Social and Behavioral Health Sciences, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Canada; Department of Health Behavior, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA. Electronic address: aa.siddiqi@utoronto.ca.
- Soc Sci Med. 2015 Apr 1; 131: 82-8.
AbstractAs the struggle continues to explain the relatively high rates of infant mortality (IMR) exhibited in the United States, a renewed emphasis is being placed on the role of possible 'contextual' determinants. Cross-sectional and short time-series studies have found that higher income inequality is associated with higher IMR at the state level. Yet, descriptively, the longer-term trends in income inequality and in IMR seem to call such results into question. To assess whether, over the period 1990-2007, state-level income inequality is associated with state-level IMR; to examine whether the overall effect of income inequality on IMR over this period varies by state; to test whether the association between income inequality and IMR varies across this time period. IMR data--number of deaths per 1000 live births in a given state and year--were obtained from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control Wonder database. Income inequality was measured using the Gini coefficient, which varies from zero (complete equality) to 100 (complete inequality). Covariates included state-level poverty rate, median income, and proportion of high school graduates. Fixed and random effects regressions were conducted to test hypotheses. Fixed effects models suggested that, overall, during the period 1990-2007, income inequality was inversely associated with IMR (β = -0.07, SE (0.01)). Random effects models suggested that when the relationship was allowed to vary at the state-level, it remained inverse (β = -0.05, SE (0.01)). However, an interaction between income inequality and time suggested that, as time increased, the effect of income inequality had an increasingly positive association with total IMR (β = 0.009, SE (0.002)). The influence of state income inequality on IMR is dependent on time, which may proxy for time-dependent aspects of societal context.Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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