1 / 18

Life Tables

Life Tables. September 15. Life Table. A statistical model for measuring the mortality (or any other type of “exit”) experiences of a population, controlling for age distributions. Types of Life Tables. Current/Period vs. Generation/Cohort Complete vs. Abridged Single vs. Multiple Decrement

kaya
Download Presentation

Life Tables

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Life Tables September 15

  2. Life Table • A statistical model for measuring the mortality (or any other type of “exit”) experiences of a population, controlling for age distributions

  3. Types of Life Tables • Current/Period vs. Generation/Cohort • Complete vs. Abridged • Single vs. Multiple Decrement • Increment/Decrement Tables

  4. Period Life Table Construction • Step 1: Solving for age-specific death rates nmx ≈ nMx = nDx / nNx

  5. Period Life Table Construction • Step 2: Decide on method for estimating nax (average person-years lived in the interval by those dying in the interval) • Direct observation • Graduation of the nmx function • Borrowing values • Rules of thumb

  6. Period Life Table Construction • Step 3: Solve for nqx (probability of dying in age interval) nqx = n * nmx / 1 + (n – nax) * nmx q85 = 1.00

  7. Period Life Table Construction • Step 4: Solve for npx (probability of surviving an age interval) npx = 1 - nqx p85 = 0.00

  8. Period Life Table Construction • Step 5: Set radix (l0) and solve for number alive at age x (lx). lx+n = lx * npx

  9. Period Life Table Construction • Step 6: Solve for deaths experienced in each age interval (ndx) ndx = lx – lx+n

  10. Period Life Table Construction • Step 7: Solve for person years lived between x and x+n (nLx) nLx = n * lx+n + nax * ndx (open-ended interval: Lx = lx / mx)

  11. Period Life Table Construction • Step 8: Solve for person years lived above age x (nTx) Tx = nLa

  12. Period Life Table Construction • Step 9: Solve for life expectancy at age x (e0x) e0x = Tx / lx

  13. Mortality Analysis with Life Tables • Expectation of life at birth • Expectation of life at age 1 • Expectation of life at age 65 • Probability of surviving from birth to the 65th birthday • Median age at death

  14. The Life Table as a Stationary Population • A population whose total number and distribution by age do not change with time • Conditions • Number of births per year remains constant • Each cohort of births experiences current observed mortality rates throughout life • Net migration = 0; or “closed” to migration

  15. The Life Table as a Stationary Population • Interpretation of functions • lo • lx • ndx • nLx • Tx • e0x • Crude death rate • Crude birth rate

  16. Age-Decomposing a Difference in Life Expectancies n ∆ x Indirect and interaction effects resulting from the person years added by additional survivors in future intervals The direct effect of a change in mortality rates between ages x and x+n Remember: For the open-ended age interval, there is only a direct effect

  17. Other Uses for Life Tables • Nuptiality (first marriage) • Migration from place of birth • Entering the labor force • Becoming a mother • Subsequent childbearing • Marital survival • Unemployment spells • Incarceration

More Related