Life expectancy and mortality in 363 cities of Latin America.
Usama BilalPhilipp HesselCarolina Perez-FerrerYvonne L MichaelTania AlfaroJaneth Tenorio-MuchaAmelia A L FricheMaria De Fatima Rodrigues Pereira De PinaAlejandra VivesHarrison QuickMarcio AlazraquiDaniel A RodriguezJ Jaime MirandaAna V Diez-Rouxnull nullPublished in: Nature medicine (2021)
The concept of a so-called urban advantage in health ignores the possibility of heterogeneity in health outcomes across cities. Using a harmonized dataset from the SALURBAL project, we describe variability and predictors of life expectancy and proportionate mortality in 363 cities across nine Latin American countries. Life expectancy differed substantially across cities within the same country. Cause-specific mortality also varied across cities, with some causes of death (unintentional and violent injuries and deaths) showing large variation within countries, whereas other causes of death (communicable, maternal, neonatal and nutritional, cancer, cardiovascular disease and other noncommunicable diseases) varied substantially between countries. In multivariable mixed models, higher levels of education, water access and sanitation and less overcrowding were associated with longer life expectancy, a relatively lower proportion of communicable, maternal, neonatal and nutritional deaths and a higher proportion of deaths from cancer, cardiovascular disease and other noncommunicable diseases. These results highlight considerable heterogeneity in life expectancy and causes of death across cities of Latin America, revealing modifiable factors that could be amenable to urban policies aimed toward improving urban health in Latin America and more generally in other urban environments.
Keyphrases
- cardiovascular disease
- public health
- cardiovascular events
- healthcare
- papillary thyroid
- type diabetes
- risk factors
- quality improvement
- squamous cell
- single cell
- health information
- birth weight
- body mass index
- coronary artery disease
- squamous cell carcinoma
- pregnancy outcomes
- climate change
- social media
- lymph node metastasis
- gestational age