Socioeconomic characteristics and health outcomes in Sami speaking municipalities and a control group in norther Norway

Artikkel basert på statistisk analyse av sosioøkonomiske faktorer og helseeffekter. Objectives: the Sami people constitute an ethnic minority in northern Norway. The objectives of this study were to compare municipalities with a majority of Sami in the population and a control group with regard to s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Circumpolar Health
Main Authors: Norum, Jan, Nieder, Carsten
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2444938
https://doi.org/10.3402/ijch.v71i0.19127
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Summary:Artikkel basert på statistisk analyse av sosioøkonomiske faktorer og helseeffekter. Objectives: the Sami people constitute an ethnic minority in northern Norway. The objectives of this study were to compare municipalities with a majority of Sami in the population and a control group with regard to socioeconomic factors and health outcome. Methods: original data from Statistics Norway and Directorate of health on socioeconomic factors (education, unemployment, disability, poverty) and health outcomes [total mortality, cancer specific mortality, cardiovascular disease (CVD) specific mortality] were imported from the “Health Atlas” at the Northern Norway Regional Health Authority (NNRHA) trust. The 8 municipalities in the administration area of the Sami language law (Sami-majority group – 18,868 inhabitants) was compared with a control group consisting of 11 municipalities where the Sami constitute a small minority in the population (18,931 inhabitants). Most data were from 2005 and 2008. Results: there was no significant difference in socioeconomic factors. Overall, cancer- and CVD-specific mortality rates were similar in both groups. The life expectancy was significantly longer among women in the Sami-majority area (81.3 vs. 79.5 years, p=0.035) and males (74.5 vs. 72.0 years, p=0.037). Conclusion: socioeconomic factors and cause-specific mortality rate were similar in the Sami-majority group and the control group. Residents of both sexes in Sami-majority areas enjoyed longer life expectancy.