Resumen
Most studies on old age mortality and survival focus on high-income countries, leaving limited knowledge about these trajectories in low- and middle-income countries. We use the longest-run longitudinal study of aging in Latin America, the Mexican Health and Aging Study (MHAS), to assess mortality and survival in the Mexican older adult population. We examine the likely impact of survey attrition and missing date of death on estimates of age-specific death rates, life expectancy, and the link between sociodemographic characteristics and mortality risk among Mexican older adults. Results show attrition of less than 6% of the baseline sample in MHAS from 2001 to 2015. Being lost to follow-up (LFU) is associated with age, education, and place of residence. Age-specific death rates and life expectancy estimates in MHAS align with vital statistics suggesting minimal impact of survey attrition in these estimates at older ages. However, ignoring sample attrition produces statistically significant educational gradients in mortality among males (but not among females), but imputing attrition and/or death date deaths reverses this pattern. Thus, we recommend imputing vital status by, for example, assuming attrited respondents survived to the midpoint of their LFU interval and assessing mortality determinants, including imputed cases. We also found sizeable sex differences in life expectancy at age 50 favoring women with larger sex differences in more populous places. We conclude that MHAS reliably supports the study of older age mortality and survival in Mexico, offering a unique chance to enhance knowledge in a middle-income country in the Americas.
| Idioma original | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Número de artículo | 2 |
| Publicación | Canadian Studies in Population |
| Volumen | 52 |
| N.º | 1 |
| DOI | |
| Estado | Published - dic 2025 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Demography
- History
Huella
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