Describing socio-economic variation in life expectancy according to an individual's education, occupation and wage in England and Wales: An analysis of the ONS Longitudinal Study

Fiona C. Ingleby*, Laura M. Woods, Iain M. Atherton, Matthew Baker, Lucy Elliss Brookes, Aurélien Belot

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    10 Citations (Scopus)
    24 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    People who live in more deprived areas have poorer health outcomes, and this inequality is a major driver of health and social policy. Many interventions targeting these disparities implicitly assume that poorer health is predominantly associated with area-level factors, and that these inequalities are the same for men and women. However, health differentials due to individual socio-economic status (SES) of men and women are less well documented. We used census data linked to the ONS Longitudinal Study to derive individual-level SES in terms of occupation, education and estimated wage, and examined differences in adult mortality and life expectancy. We modelled age-, sex- and SES-specific mortality using Poisson regression, and summarised mortality differences using life expectancy at age 20. We compared the results to those calculated using area-level deprivation metrics. Wide inequalities in life expectancy between SES groups were observed, although differences across SES groups were smaller for women than for men. The widest inequalities were found across men's education (7.2-year (95% CI: 3.0–10.1) difference in life expectancy between groups) and wage (7.0-year (95% CI: 3.5–9.8) difference), and women's education (5.4-year (95% CI: 2.2–8.1) difference). Men with no qualifications had the lowest life expectancy of all groups. In terms of the number of years' difference in life expectancy, the inequalities measured here with individual-level data were of a similar magnitude to inequalities identified previously using area-level deprivation metrics. These data show that health inequalities are as strongly related to individual SES as to area-level deprivation, highlighting the complementary usefulness of these different metrics. Indeed, poor outcomes are likely to be a product of both community and individual influences. Current policy which bases health spending decisions on evidence of inequalities between geographical areas may overlook individual-level SES inequalities for those living in affluent areas, as well as missing important sex differences.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number100815
    JournalSSM - Population Health
    Volume14
    Early online date8 May 2021
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jun 2021

    Bibliographical note

    Funding Information: The permission of the Office for National Statistics to use the Longitudinal Study is gratefully acknowledged , as is the help provided by staff of the Centre for Longitudinal Study Information & User Support (CeLSIUS) . CeLSIUS is supported by the ESRC Census of Population Programme under project ES/R00823X/1 . The authors alone are responsible for the interpretation of the data in this paper. This study was supported by a grant from the Economic and Social Research Council ( ES/S001808/1 ) and partially by a programme grant from Cancer Research UK ( C7923/A18525 ).

    Open Access: This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

    Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Author(s)

    Citation: Ingleby, Fiona C., et al. "Describing socio-economic variation in life expectancy according to an individual's education, occupation and wage in England and Wales: An analysis of the ONS Longitudinal Study." SSM-Population Health (2021): 100815

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100815

    Keywords

    • Census data
    • Educational status
    • Income
    • Life expectancy
    • Mortality
    • Occupational groups
    • Socio-economic status

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