Evidence for a black-white crossover in all-cause and coronary heart disease mortality in an older population: the North Carolina EPESE.
M C Corti,
J M Guralnik,
L Ferrucci,
G Izmirlian,
S G Leveille,
M Pahor,
H J Cohen,
C Pieper and
R J Havlik
Epidemiology, Demography, and Biometry Program, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md., USA.
OBJECTIVES: This cohort study evaluated racial differences inmortality among Blacks and Whites 65 years and older. METHODS:A total of 4136 men and women (1875 Whites and 2261 Blacks)living in North Carolina were interviewed in 1986 and followedup for mortality until 1994. Hazard ratios (HRs) for all-causeand cause-specific mortality were calculated, with adjustmentfor sociodemographic and coronary heart disease (CHD) risk factors.RESULTS: Black persons had higher mortality rates than Whitesat young-old age (65-80 years) but had significantly lower mortalityrates after age 80. Black persons age 80 or older had a significantlylower risk of all-cause mortality (HR of Blacks vs Whites, 0.75;95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.62, 0.90) and of CHD mortality(HR 0.44: 95% CI = 0.30, 0.66). These differences were not observedfor other causes of death. CONCLUSIONS: Racial differences inmortality are modified by age. This mortality crossover couldbe attributed to selective survival of the healthiest oldestBlacks or to other biomedical factors affecting longevity afterage 80. Because the crossover was observed for CHD deaths only,age overreporting by Black older persons seems an unlikely explanationof the mortality differences.
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