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Health Event Counts and Crude, Age-specific, and Age-adjusted Rates

Table of Contents


A. Counts
B. Crude Rates
C. Age- and Sex-specific Rates
D. Age-adjusted Rates
....D.1. Age-adjusted Rates, Direct Method
....D.2. Indirectly Age-adjusted Rates, Indirect Method
E. Deciding Which Measure to Use
References



A. Counts

When communicating with health planning groups or legislators, the total number of health events, or the count, can convey the magnitude of the problem, the prevention effort required, or the health care that may be needed. Table 1 shows some examples of counts.

Table 1: Number of Deaths for Four Leading Causes by Cause and Sex, Utah, 2005


Underlying Cause of Death Men Women Total
Disease of heart
(ICD10: I00-I09, I11, I13, I20-I51)

1,408

1,437

2,845

Malignant neoplasms
(ICD10: C00-C97)

1,344

1,168

2,512

Injury, Unintentional injuries
(ICD10: V01-X59, Y85-Y86)

466

249

715

Respiratory, chronic lower respiratory diseases (ICD10: J40-J47)

335

257

592






B. Crude Rates

The count alone will be less useful if you want to compare populations of unequal size. Knowing the population sizes is useful, but computing a rate will allow direct comparison between similar populations. A rate is a fraction that typically has four components:
  1. A specified time period.
  2. The numerator, the number of people in whom an event occurred during a given period of time.
  3. The denominator, the total number of people in the population at risk for the same period of time. This is also referred to as the "person-years at risk."
  4. A constant. The result of the fraction is usually multiplied by some constant (in this case 100,000) to make the number more legible.

info icon Many measures used in public health assessment specify a time period of one or more calendar years. This is because many public health numerator datasets have calendar year production periods. But other time periods are commonly used; for example calendar weeks in the instance of notifiable diseases. To calculate the "person-years at risk" for a time period that is less than one year, you need to multiply the population estimate by the portion of the year represented in the numerator. For instance, to calculate a crude rate for the number of cases of disease over a 10-week period, your denominator would be the July 1 population estimate multiplied by (10 weeks/52 weeks), or 0.1923.

In general, a rate is called a "crude rate" if it has not been adjusted for the age and sex composition of a population.

Table 2 shows an example of crude rate calculations for heart disease by local health districts. The example, which is a three year time period, averages the number of deaths occurring per year divided by the population to produce the crude death rates for the period.

Table 2: Crude Death Rate for Heart Disease by Local Health District, Utah, 2003-2005


Utah Local Health District Average Annual Number of Deaths Average Annual Population Estimate Crude Death Rate (Deaths per 100,000 Population)
Bear River LHD

168

147,371

113.77

Central Utah LHD

149

70,382

211.7

Davis County LHD

278

269,744

102.94

Salt Lake Valley LHD

1,081

957,972

112.84

Southeastern LHD

83

52,936

156.79

Southwest LHD

286

174,363

164.03

Summit County LHD

22

35,149

61.64

Tooele County LHD

56

50,388

111.14

TriCounty LHD

68

42,277

161.63

Utah County LHD

404

438,995

92.03

Wasatch County LHD

17

19,230

90.14

Weber-Morgan LHD

312

217,939

143.16



Using the values, above, for Bear River LHD as an example...
  1. The specified time period is 2003 through 2005.
  2. The numerator, or the number of events was averaged over the three years, for a value of 167.67 (before rounding).
  3. The denominator, or the estimated population at risk, was also averaged over the three years. The average of the three July 1 population population estimates was 147,370.67.
  4. The constant was 100,000.

The calculation for the Bear River LHD heart disease crude death rate for 2003-2005 looks like this:
167.67 / 147,370.67 = 0.0011377; 0.0011377 * 100,000 = 113.77



FAQs for Crude Rates:


Combining Years

Q: I am looking at death rates for a five-year period. What should I use for a population denominator?
A: If you are combining numerator values over the five years by summing them, then use the sum of the population counts over the same period. If you are combining numerator values by taking an average, then take an average of the population counts for the same time period and geographic area. Alternatively, you could also use an average over the five years in the numerator, and a "mid-point" population estimate, that is, a population estimate for the mid-point, or middle, year in the denominator.


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C. Age- and Sex-specific Rates

An age-specific rate is calculated by dividing the total number of health events for the specific age-group of interest by the total population in that age group. In Table 3, the age- and sex-specific rates for suicide are shown. The example demonstrates that the greatest number of suicides occur among adolescents and young adults, whereas the highest rate occurs among elderly men.

The calculation for an age-specific rate is the same as for a crude rate.

Table 3: Suicide Mortality Rates by Age and Sex, Utah, 2002-2006


Males Females
Age Group Suicide Deaths Population Age- and Sex-specific Rate per 100,000 Population Suicide Deaths Population Age- and Sex-specific Rate per 100,000 Population
<15

13

1,677,087

0.78

5

1,587,965

0.31

15-44

852

2,921,606

29.16

199

2,838,704

7.01

45-64

372

1,153,370

32.25

117

1,163,236

10.06

65+

168

474,715

35.39

23

587,013

3.92



info icon Looking at rates within groups is also called "stratification." In Table 3, the population has been stratified by age and sex. The data in Table 3 also show how useful stratification can be. Not only are the suicide death rates much higher among men, the rate of suicide increases with age for men, but not for women.


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D. Age-adjusted Rates

Crude rates are valuable for comparing similar population of different sizes, but the word, "similar" is a key concept, because crude rates can be misleading when comparing rates for populations with different age compositions. The crude mortality rate for a population depends on the mortality rate in each age group as well as on the proportion of people in each age group. For instance, the crude rate for most causes of death will be higher in populations with a large proportion of elderly individuals, and lower in populations with a large proportion of young individuals. An age-adjusted rate may be used to compare mortality or disease risk in two populations with with different age compositions.

An adjusted rate is an overall summary measure that helps control for age differences between populations. When comparing across geographic areas, some method of age-adjusting is typically used to control for area-to-area differences in health events that can be explained by different age distributions in the area populations. For example, an area that has an older population will have higher crude death rates for cancer, even though its exposure levels and cancer rates within specific age groups may be the same as those in other areas. One might incorrectly attribute the high cancer rates to some characteristic of the area other than age. Age-adjusted rates control for age effects, allowing better comparability of rates across areas. Age-adjustment may also be used to control for age effects when comparing across several years of data, as the age distribution of the population changes over time.

Calculating age-adjusted rates using "direct age standardization" is the same as calculating a weighted average. It adjusts the age-specific rates observed in a given population (such as a county or ethnic group) to the age distribution of a standard population (Lilienfeld & Stolley, 1994). In some cases, such as when there are too few cases to stratify by age, "indirect age standardization" may be used. Indirect standardization is based on standard mortality and morbidity ratios (SMR), and adjusts the age-specific rates found in the standard population to the age distribution of the smaller area or sub-population.

In 1998, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) revised the standard population weights for age-adjustment (Klein & Schoenborn), replacing the 1940 U.S. standard population weights that had been used for the previous several decades. Table 4, below, contains the standard population weights published by the CDC. They represent the proportion of the U.S. 2000 population in each age group, and sum to 1.0.

important! icon Compare only age-adjusted rates that have been adjusted to the same standard population. For instance, don't compare rates age-adjusted using the U.S. 1940 standard population with rates that were age-adjusted using the U.S. 2000 population.

Age-adjusted rates should be viewed as relative indexes, and used for comparison of populations. They are not actual measures of mortality risk, and do not convey the magnitude of the problem.


Table 4. U.S. 2000 Standard Population Weights for Age Standardization


Age Group U.S. 2000 Population Projection
(in thousands)
Weight

1

Under 1 Year

3,795

0.013818

2

1 - 4 Years

15,192

0.055317

3

5 - 14 Years

39,977

0.145565

4

15 - 24 Years

38,077

0.138646

5

25 - 34 Years

37,233

0.135573

6

35 - 44 Years

44,659

0.162613

7

45 - 54 Years

37,030

0.134834

8

55 - 64 Years

23,961

0.087247

9

65 - 74 Years

18,136

0.066037

10

75 - 84 Years

12,315

0.044842

11

85 Years and Over

4,259

0.015508



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D.1. Age-adjusted Rates: Direct Method


To apply direct age-adjustment to a set of rates, the age-specific rate for each age group in the study population is multiplied by the appropriate weight in the standard population. The sum of these products is the directly age-adjusted, or age-standardized rate. The age-adjusted rate can be considered an average of each of the individual age-specific rates, but rather than being a simple average, it is a weighted average with each age-specific rate weighted by the proportion of people in the same age group in the standard population.

Tables 5a and 5b demonstrate the method used by IBIS-Q in calculating age-adjusted rates. Notice that using crude death rates in Tables 5a and 5b, one might conclude that persons in Southwest LHD have a higher underlying risk for unintentional injury death compared with the state of Utah. How should the age-adjusted death rates be interpreted? You could use confidence intervals to assist in interpreting these data (IBIS automatically provides 95% confidence intervals for all rates).

Table 5a. Age-adjusted Death Rate for Unintentional Injuries, State of Utah, 2002-2006


Age Group Number of Deaths (5-Year Sum) Population Counts (5-Year Sum) (1) Age- specific Rate (2) U.S. 2000 Std Pop Weight Cross Products (3)
Under 1 Year

42

250,611

16.76

0.013818

0.231576

1 - 4 Years

121

960,731

12.59

0.055317

0.696694

5 - 14 Years

130

2,053,710

6.33

0.145565

0.921428

15 - 24 Years

560

2,253,594

24.85

0.138646

3.445242

25 - 34 Years

452

1,957,687

23.09

0.135573

3.130173

35 - 44 Years

369

1,549,029

23.82

0.162613

3.873665

45 - 54 Years

394

1,405,684

28.03

0.134834

3.779270

55 - 64 Years

297

910,922

32.60

0.087247

2.844630

65 - 74 Years

256

564,672

45.34

0.066037

2.993857

75 - 84 Years

396

372,361

106.35

0.044842

4.768875

85 Years and Over

443

124,695

355.27

0.015508

5.509478

All Ages

3,462

12,403,696

27.91 (4)

1

32.19 (5)



Table 5b. Age-adjusted Rate for Unintentional Injuries, Southwest LHD, Utah, 2002-2006


Age Group Number of Deaths (5-Year Sum) Population Counts (5-Year Sum) (1) Age- specific Rate (2) U.S. 2000 Std Pop Weight Cross Products (3)
Under 1 Year

5

16,753

29.85

0.013818

0.412404

1 - 4 Years

13

62,149

20.92

0.055317

1.157092

5 - 14 Years

18

135,238

13.31

0.145565

1.937451

15 - 24 Years

51

157,563

32.37

0.138646

4.487694

25 - 34 Years

34

117,343

28.97

0.135573

3.928212

35 - 44 Years

32

94,544

33.85

0.162613

5.503909

45 - 54 Years

23

91,791

25.06

0.134834

3.378525

55 - 64 Years

34

72,058

47.18

0.087247

4.116681

65 - 74 Years

25

64,701

38.64

0.066037

2.551622

75 - 84 Years

28

48,070

58.25

0.044842

2.611974

85 Years and Over

39

15,410

253.08

0.015508

3.924802

All Ages

302

875,620

34.49 (4)

1

34.01 (5)



(1) The Utah Population Estimates Committee (UPEC) and the Governor's Office of Planning and Budget (GOPB), Estimates for Counties by Sex and Single Year of Age.
(2) Rate per 100,000 = (Age-specific death count * 100,000) / Age-specific population count
(3) Age-specific death rate * U.S. 2000 Std Pop Weight
(4) Crude death rate
(5) Age-adjusted rate


According to Curtin & Klein, "One of the problems with [direct age adjustment] is that rates based on small numbers of deaths will exhibit a large amount of random variation. A very rough guideline is that there should be at least 25 total deaths over all age groups." When fewer than 25 health events occurred over a time period, you may consider combining years, or using indirect age-adjustment.

Age adjustment is not appropriate if the age-specific death rates in the population of interest do not have a consistent relationship. For example, if death rates among younger persons is increasing, but death rates among older persons is decreasing. One's conclusion of the trend in this death rate would be different, depending on which standard population is used. A younger standard population (such as the U.S. 1940) would show an increase, whereas an older standard population (such as the U.S. 2000) would show a decrease, or no change at all. One's selection of the standard population should not affect the comparisons. For more information, see Curtin & Klein.

When reporting age-adjusted rates, always report the standard population used, and when comparing results to other data, be sure to document that those data were also age-adjusted and report the standard population. The age-adjusted rate is hypothetical, and is useful only for comparing populations, either over time, by geographic area, by sex, or by racial/ethnic subgroups.

important! icon Although age-adjustment may be used with broad population age groups, such as adults (e.g., age 18+), it is not necessary to age-adjust data for smaller age groups (e.g., age 18-24).


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FAQs for Age-adjustment:


Event Rates for a Subpopulation

Q: I am looking at death rates for female breast cancer. Which standard population should I use, females in U.S. 2000 or all persons?
A: Theoretically, it doesn't matter, as long as you use the same standard population for all your analyses. But the recommended standard population is now the U.S. 2000 total population, even for analyses that apply only to a particular sex, race, or other subgroup.

When NOT to Age-adjust

Q: Are there times I should NOT age-adjust?
A: Yes. Do NOT use age-adjustment when...
  • You are comparing populations with similar age distributions, and age-adjustment does not produce a rate that is substantively different from the crude rate.
  • You are comparing groups with the same, narrow, age range.
  • Do not use direct age-adjustment if you have too few cases (you should have a least 25 events across all age groups).

Age Subpopulations

Q: I am looking at adults, only. If I use the weights in Table 4, above, they will not sum to one. Is that okay?
A: No. The weights must always sum to one. Weights for certain age subgroups have been published by the CDC. But you may also recompute the proportions in Table 4, using only the age range that is relevant to your analysis.

Age/Sex Adjusted Rates

Q: I have a report that uses age AND SEX adjusted rates. What is this, and why doesn't IBIS produce age and sex adjusted rates?
A: It is sometimes appropriate to adjust by other variables besides age. Rates that have been adjusted by age and sex use age- and sex-specific rates, weighted by twice the number of weights (one set for males and one set for females), but the total of all the weights still must sum to 1.0. IBIS-Q doesn't compute these rates because there is little demand for it.

Confidence Intervals for Age-adjusted Rates

Q: Can I use the confidence interval for the crude rate with the age-adjusted rate?
A: No, a new confidence interval for the age-adjusted rate must be calculated. Methods for calculation of this confidence interval may be found in Curtin & Klein.


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D.2. Age-adjusted Rates: Indirect Method



The direct method can present problems when population sizes are particularly small. Calculating directly standardized rates requires calculating age-group-specific rates, and for Utah Small Areas these age-specific rates may be based on one or two events. In such cases, indirect standardization of rates may be used.

Indirectly standardized rates are based on the standard mortality or morbidity ratio (SMR) and the crude rate for a standard population. Indirect standardization adjusts the overall standard population death rate to the age distribution of the small area (Lilienfeld & Stolley, 1994). It is technically appropriate to compare indirectly standardized rates only with the rate in the standard population, not with each other.




E. Deciding Which Measure to Use



So, how do I know which one to use!? You will want to use the measure that best informs the question you are trying to answer. This is a guideline, not a hard and fast rule, but generally:

If your question is: Then use:
MAGNITUDE: How big is the problem? Number of events (count)
PROBABILITY: What is the underlying risk in my population? Crude rate and confidence interval
DISPARITY: Is there a difference in risk after controlling for age? Age-adjusted rate and confidence interval


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1. Anderson RN, Rosenberg HM. Age Standardization of Death Rates: Implementation of the Year 2000 Standard. National vital statistics reports; vol 47 no.3. Hyattsville, Maryland: National Center for Health Statistics. 1998.

2. Klein RJ, Schoenborn CA. Age-Adjustment Using the 2000 Projected U.S. Population. Statistical notes; no.20. Hyattsville, Maryland: National Center for Health Statistics. January 2001.

3. Curtin, LR, Klein, RJ. Direct Standardization (Age-Adjusted Death Rates). Statistical notes; no.6. Hyattsville, Maryland: National Center for Health Statistics. March 1995.

4. Fleis, JL. Statistical methods for rates and proportions. John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1973. As cited in Curtin and Klein, 1995.

5. Klein RJ, Schoenborn CA., 2001.

6. Lilienfeld, DE and Stolley, PD. Foundations of Epidemiology, 3rd Ed. Oxford University Press, 1994.

The information provided above is from the Utah Department of Health and Human Services IBIS-PH web site (http://ibis.health.state.gov). The information published on this website may be reproduced without permission. Please use the following citation: " Retrieved Thu, 28 March 2024 2:49:55 from Utah Department of Health and Human Services, Indicator-Based Information System for Public Health Web site: http://ibis.health.state.gov ".

Content updated: Wed, 28 Oct 2015 14:16:15 MDT