Sex‐based tuberculosis mortality in Newfoundland, 1900–1949: Implications for populations in transition

Abstract Objective During the second epidemiological transition, tuberculosis (TB) is one disease that declined substantially enough to reduce all‐cause mortality. Sex‐based differences in TB mortality may reveal an important dimension of population health transitions between the urbanizing and rura...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:American Journal of Human Biology
Main Author: van Doren, Taylor P.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajhb.24033
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/ajhb.24033
Description
Summary:Abstract Objective During the second epidemiological transition, tuberculosis (TB) is one disease that declined substantially enough to reduce all‐cause mortality. Sex‐based differences in TB mortality may reveal an important dimension of population health transitions between the urbanizing and rural regions of Newfoundland. Materials and Methods For the island of Newfoundland, yearly age‐standardized sex‐based TB mortality rates were calculated using individual death records from 1900 to 1949 ( n = 30 393). Multiple linear regression models predict the relative rates (RR) of sex‐based mortality and the absolute difference between males and females while controlling for time and region (the urbanizing Avalon Peninsula or rural Newfoundland). Multiple linear regression models also predict the median age at death from TB while controlling for time, region, and sex to assess if TB was shifting to an older adult disease compared to those typically afflicted in ages 20–44. Results Female TB mortality was relatively and absolutely higher than males; additionally, RR and absolute differences between male and female mortality were significantly lower in rural Newfoundland than the Avalon Peninsula. Median age at death for males was significantly higher than females, and differences in median age at death increased over time. Discussion The historically high prevalence of TB throughout Newfoundland, including domestic, social, and public health responsibilities of women, likely contributed to increased exposure and transmission, leading to higher observed mortality. Sex‐based TB outcomes should be considered in the discussion of the progression of the epidemiological transition as dynamic inequalities that do not necessarily fit contemporary generalizations of sex‐based TB epidemiology.