16 research outputs found

    Additional file 1: Figure S1. of Ethnic inequalities in cancer incidence and mortality: census-linked cohort studies with 87 million years of person-time follow-up

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    Hazardous alcohol consumption by ethnicity as measured by the AUDIT tool, score ≥8 for 15+ year olds in the New Zealand Health Survey. Figure S2. Seroprevalence data indicating H. pylori prevalence by birth cohort (McDonald et al., 2015) in New Zealand. Figure S3. Mortality rates by ethnicity for all-cause and specific causes of mortality, from national census-linked data in New Zealand males and females 1–74 years old 1981–2011. Figure S4. Cancer mortality by ethnicity, age standardised, from the national census-linked data in New Zealand males and females 1–74 years old 1981–2011. Figure S5. Absolute ethnic inequalities (age standardised rate differences) in cancer incidence, from national census-linked data in New Zealand males and females 1–74 years old 1981–2011. Figure S6. Absolute ethnic inequalities (age standardised rate differences) in cancer mortality, from national census-linked data in New Zealand males and females 1–74 years old 1981–2011. Figure S7. Decomposition of absolute ethnic inequalities in cancer mortality (top) and incidence (bottom) by major contributing cancer types, comparing Māori and Pacific peoples with European/Other in males and females aged 1–74 years in New Zealand. Table S1. SAS output only showing the statistically significant rate differences used to select cancer incidences for presenting in this paper. (DOCX 840 kb

    QALYs gained and health system costs (NZ$) averted from a 10% per annum increase in tobacco tax from 2011 to 2031, among the New Zealand population alive in 2011 (0% discounting).

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    <p><sup>†</sup> Māori “QALYs—Equity” are calculated using non-Māori background mortality and morbidity rates so as not to “penalize” Māori because of worse background mortality and morbidity.</p><p><sup><b>‡</b></sup> Includes both the cost offsets and intervention cost, the latter being the cost of a law (NZ3.5million,953.5 million, 95% UI NZ2.0 to NZ6.2 million [27]) to introduce tobacco taxes increases of 10% per annum to 2031, distributed pro rata across all people alive in 2011. The cost of a law was not partitioned by age, sex, and ethnicity.

    See S3 Table for uncertainty distributions.

    QALYs gained and health system costs (NZ) averted from a 10% per annum increase in tobacco tax from 2011 to 2031, among the New Zealand population alive in 2011 (0% discounting).</p

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