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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Lunds Universitet |
| Country | Sweden |
| Start Date | Jan 01, 2025 |
| End Date | Dec 31, 2029 |
| Duration | 1,825 days |
| Number of Grantees | 2 |
| Roles | Coordinator; Participant |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 101163144 |
Worldwide life expectancy has increased strongly over the past decades, but social inequalities in health and mortality are large and increasing.
In contrast to trends in socioeconomic inequality and social mobility, long-term developments in inequality in health and mortality have been poorly documented. “Relative Health” aims to quantify the level of inequality in health and mortality from a family perspective 1800-today.
Characteristics that affect health and mortality accumulate in families, and thus the level of inequality in health and mortality can be quantified by addressing similarities within families in health and mortality (same-generation relatives) and intergenerational persistence of health and survival (ancestors and descendants).
The project has four main objectives:1.Develop new ways to measure inequality in health and mortality using a revolutionary new perspective, inequality between families and intergenerational persistence; 2.Using these, describe for the first time long-term trends in health and mortality inequality; 3.Identify mechanisms that shape these inequalities between families and across generations;4.Identify the role of contextual characteristics in shaping inequalities between families, including the level of social mobility and social inequality.
State-of-the-art population reconstructions cover up to 9 generations of relatives (grandparents, parents, children) in Sweden, Netherlands, and US 1800-today and contain lifespan and health information.
The project lays the groundwork to generalize these estimates of family health inequality to many contexts with less abundant data sources, using survey data.
These contain indicators of health and mortality for focal individuals, their siblings and children for a range of low- and middle-income countries covering 4 decades (DHS, 1984-2018).
Overall, the project seeks to transform our understanding of social inequality in health and mortality across time and space.
Lunds Universitet; Carl Von Ossietzky Universitaet Oldenburg
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