Standardised Data

The total annual deaths in Florida and Alaska are 131,902 and 2,116, respectively. The total population in Florida is 12,340,000, and Alaska’s is 530,000. How are death rates compared?

Crude mortality rate

The simplest thing to do here is to calculate the crude mortality rates by dividing the deaths by the population.

FloridaAlaska
Crude mortality rate
/100,000
131,902 x 100,000/12,340,000
= 1069
2,116 x 100,000/530,000
=399

The crude mortality ratio is 1069/399 = 2.68. Does that mean that the death rate is unusually high in Alaska?

Standardisation

The problem statement is: Do Alaskans (study population) have a higher mortality rate than the Floridians (standard population)?

Step 1: Mortality rate in the standard population – stratification by age group:

AgePopulationRate
/100,000
<5850,000284
5-192,280,00057
20-444,410,000198
45-642,600,000815
>652,200,0004425
Totals12,340,000
Data from Florida

Step 2: Use study population age distribution to find the expected rate

AgeRate in FloridaPopulation
Alaska
Expected
deaths
<528460,000284×60,000/100,000
= 170.4
5-1957130,00057×130,000/100,000
= 74.1
20-44198240,000198×240,000/100,000
= 475.2
45-6481580,000815×80,000/100,000
=65.2
>65442520,0004425×20,000/100,000
= 89
Total2256.7
Data from Florida

Step 3: Compare total expected deaths to actual deaths
Standardised Mortality Rate (SMR) = 2,256.7/2,116 = 1.07

SMR is close to 1; therefore, there is nothing unusual about the death rate in Alaska compared to Florida.

References

Confounding and Effect Measure Modification: BUMC