Risk factor differences might drive differences in life expectancy and disease burden that merit attention also in high-income settings such as the Nordic countries. Special attention should be given to the high disease burden in Greenland…

Author

Nordic Burden of Disease Collaborators

Citation

Knudsen, A., Allebeck, P., Tollånes, M., Skogen, J., Iburg, K., McGrath, J., Juel, K., Agardh, E., Ärnlöv, J., Bjørge, T., Carrero, J., Cederroth, C., Eggen, A., El-Khatib, Z., Ellingsen, C., Fereshtehnejad, S., Gissler, M., Hadkhale, K., Havmoeller, R., Johansson, L., Juliusson, P., Kiadaliri, A., Kisa, S., Kisa, A., Lallukka, T., Mekonnen, T., Meretoja, T., Meretoja, A., Naghavi, M., Neupane, S., Nguyen, T., Petzold, M., Plana-Ripoll, O., Shiri, R., Sigurvinsdottir, R., Skirbekk, V., Skou, S., Sigfusdottir, I., Steiner, T., Sulo, G., Truelsen, T., Vasankari, T., Weiderpass, E., Vollset, S., Vos, T. and Øverland, S. (2019). Life expectancy and disease burden in the Nordic countries: results from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2017. The Lancet Public Health.


Source
The Lancet
Release date
20/11/2019

Life Expectancy and Disease Burden in the Nordic Countries: Results from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2017

Research article

Abstract

Background

The Nordic countries have commonalities in gender equality, economy, welfare, and health care, but differ in culture and lifestyle, which might create country-wise health differences. This study compared life expectancy, disease burden, and risk factors in the Nordic region.

Methods

Life expectancy in years and age-standardised rates of overall, cause-specific, and risk factor-specific estimates of disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) were analysed in the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) 2017. Data were extracted for Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden (ie, the Nordic countries), and Greenland, an autonomous area of Denmark. Estimates were compared with global, high-income region, and Nordic regional estimates, including Greenland.

Findings

All Nordic countries exceeded the global life expectancy; in 2017, the highest life expectancy was in Iceland among females (85·9 years vs 75·6 years globally) and Sweden among males (80·8 years vs 70·5 years globally). Females (82·7 years) and males (78·8 years) in Denmark and males in Finland (78·6 years) had lower life expectancy than in the other Nordic countries. The lowest life expectancy in the Nordic region was in Greenland (females 77·2 years , males 70·8 years). Overall disease burden was lower in the Nordic countries than globally, with the lowest age-standardised DALY rates among Swedish males (18 555·7 DALYs per 100 000 population vs 35 834·3 DALYs globally) and Icelandic females (16 074·1 DALYs vs 29 934·6 DALYs globally). Greenland had substantially higher DALY rates (26 666·6 DALYs among females, 33 101·3 DALYs among males) than the Nordic countries. Country variation was primarily due to differences in causes that largely contributed to DALYs through mortality, such as ischaemic heart disease. These causes dominated male disease burden, whereas non-fatal causes such as low back pain were important for female disease burden. Smoking and metabolic risk factors were high-ranking risk factors across all countries. DALYs attributable to alcohol use and smoking were particularly high among the Danes, as was alcohol use among Finnish males.

Interpretation

Risk factor differences might drive differences in life expectancy and disease burden that merit attention also in high-income settings such as the Nordic countries. Special attention should be given to the high disease burden in Greenland.


Source Website: The Lancet