1992
DOI: 10.2307/2061852
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A description of the extreme aged population based on improved medicare enrollment data

Abstract: The mortality and size of the extreme aged population can be studied most accurately with Medicare enrollment data from the Social Security Administration's Master Beneficiary Record after certain types of questionable records are eliminated. With the improved data base we find that mortality rates at the very old ages are higher than published rates, we are more confident of the reality of the race crossover, and we can estimate the number of centenarians more accurately. Furthermore, a large matched-records … Show more

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Cited by 122 publications
(77 citation statements)
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“…30,31 We selected ages 85-95 as a representative range for estimating a regression equation for conditional probability of death, and we then constrained the intercept to equal the conditional probability of death values by age, race, or sex observed at age eighty-four. In other words, race was incorporated by parallel displacements of the regression line.…”
Section: Study Data and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…30,31 We selected ages 85-95 as a representative range for estimating a regression equation for conditional probability of death, and we then constrained the intercept to equal the conditional probability of death values by age, race, or sex observed at age eighty-four. In other words, race was incorporated by parallel displacements of the regression line.…”
Section: Study Data and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using high quality Medicare data, Kestenbaum (1992) showed a racial crossover in the 1987 period at age 90. A racial crossover implies that white mortality was lower than black mortality until this age, at which point the relationship reversed.…”
Section: Disparities In Mortality and Total Life Expectancymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Until recently, demographers have been very wary of using U.S. mortality data at older ages because of concerns about the validity of agereporting. New data sources, carefully checked by meticulous analysts, now permit accurate estimation of U.S. death rates, at least up to ages in the late 90s for the white population (Kestenbaum 1992;Shrestha & Preston 1995;Manton & Vaupel 1995). Figure 5 compares some of these estimates with estimates for England & Wales and Sweden.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%