Avoidable Cancer Mortality in Germany Since Reunification: Regional Variation and Sex Differences

Background: Regional comparisons of cancer-related mortality in Germany are traditionally focused on disparities between East and West Germany. Recent improvements in all-cause and cancer-related mortality show a diverse regional pattern beyond the known East-West mortality divide. A generalized app...

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Main Authors: Ronny Westerman, Michael Mühlichen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2019.00187/full
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spelling doaj-927ab277d6e44ad58deb1bb79541ec262020-11-24T21:52:58ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Public Health2296-25652019-07-01710.3389/fpubh.2019.00187469888Avoidable Cancer Mortality in Germany Since Reunification: Regional Variation and Sex DifferencesRonny Westerman0Michael Mühlichen1Competence Center Mortality-Follow-Up, German National Cohort (GNC), Federal Institute for Population Research, Wiesbaden, GermanyFederal Institute for Population Research, Wiesbaden, GermanyBackground: Regional comparisons of cancer-related mortality in Germany are traditionally focused on disparities between East and West Germany. Recent improvements in all-cause and cancer-related mortality show a diverse regional pattern beyond the known East-West mortality divide. A generalized approach of the avoidable/amenable cancer mortality definition is applied for suitable regional comparisons of long-term trends.Methods: Standardized death rates of preventable and amenable cancer mortality for men and women were computed for the period 1990–2014 to observe sex-specific excess mortality due to specific cancers after the German reunification. For regional comparison, three German super regions were defined in Eastern, Northwestern, and Southwestern Germany to account for similarities in long-term regional premature and cancer-related mortality patterns, socioeconomic characteristics, and age structure.Results: Since preventable and amenable cancer mortality rates typically have driven the recent trends in premature mortality, our findings underline the current regional pattern of preventable cancer mortality for males with disadvantages for Eastern Germany, and advantages for Southwestern Germany. Among women, the preventable cancer mortality has increased in Northwestern and Southwestern Germany after the German reunification but has decreased in Eastern Germany and converged to the pattern of Southwestern Germany. Similar patterns can be observed for females in amenable cancer mortality.Conclusions: Although the “traditional” East-West gap in preventable cancer mortality was still evident in males, our study provides some hints for more regional diversity in avoidable cancer mortality in women. An establishing north-south divide in avoidable cancer mortality could alter the future trends in regional cancer-related mortality in Germany.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2019.00187/fulldemographyavoidable mortalitycancer mortalityregional differencesgender gapGermany
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ronny Westerman
Michael Mühlichen
spellingShingle Ronny Westerman
Michael Mühlichen
Avoidable Cancer Mortality in Germany Since Reunification: Regional Variation and Sex Differences
Frontiers in Public Health
demography
avoidable mortality
cancer mortality
regional differences
gender gap
Germany
author_facet Ronny Westerman
Michael Mühlichen
author_sort Ronny Westerman
title Avoidable Cancer Mortality in Germany Since Reunification: Regional Variation and Sex Differences
title_short Avoidable Cancer Mortality in Germany Since Reunification: Regional Variation and Sex Differences
title_full Avoidable Cancer Mortality in Germany Since Reunification: Regional Variation and Sex Differences
title_fullStr Avoidable Cancer Mortality in Germany Since Reunification: Regional Variation and Sex Differences
title_full_unstemmed Avoidable Cancer Mortality in Germany Since Reunification: Regional Variation and Sex Differences
title_sort avoidable cancer mortality in germany since reunification: regional variation and sex differences
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Public Health
issn 2296-2565
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Background: Regional comparisons of cancer-related mortality in Germany are traditionally focused on disparities between East and West Germany. Recent improvements in all-cause and cancer-related mortality show a diverse regional pattern beyond the known East-West mortality divide. A generalized approach of the avoidable/amenable cancer mortality definition is applied for suitable regional comparisons of long-term trends.Methods: Standardized death rates of preventable and amenable cancer mortality for men and women were computed for the period 1990–2014 to observe sex-specific excess mortality due to specific cancers after the German reunification. For regional comparison, three German super regions were defined in Eastern, Northwestern, and Southwestern Germany to account for similarities in long-term regional premature and cancer-related mortality patterns, socioeconomic characteristics, and age structure.Results: Since preventable and amenable cancer mortality rates typically have driven the recent trends in premature mortality, our findings underline the current regional pattern of preventable cancer mortality for males with disadvantages for Eastern Germany, and advantages for Southwestern Germany. Among women, the preventable cancer mortality has increased in Northwestern and Southwestern Germany after the German reunification but has decreased in Eastern Germany and converged to the pattern of Southwestern Germany. Similar patterns can be observed for females in amenable cancer mortality.Conclusions: Although the “traditional” East-West gap in preventable cancer mortality was still evident in males, our study provides some hints for more regional diversity in avoidable cancer mortality in women. An establishing north-south divide in avoidable cancer mortality could alter the future trends in regional cancer-related mortality in Germany.
topic demography
avoidable mortality
cancer mortality
regional differences
gender gap
Germany
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2019.00187/full
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AT michaelmuhlichen avoidablecancermortalityingermanysincereunificationregionalvariationandsexdifferences
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