Forecasting Mortality in Developed Countries | Insights from a Statistical, Demographic and Epidemiological Perspective | ISBN 9780792368335

Forecasting Mortality in Developed Countries

Insights from a Statistical, Demographic and Epidemiological Perspective

herausgegeben von E. Tabeau, Anneke van den Berg Jeths und Christopher Heathcote
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonE. Tabeau
Herausgegeben vonAnneke van den Berg Jeths
Herausgegeben vonChristopher Heathcote
Buchcover Forecasting Mortality in Developed Countries  | EAN 9780792368335 | ISBN 0-7923-6833-9 | ISBN 978-0-7923-6833-5

Forecasting Mortality in Developed Countries

Insights from a Statistical, Demographic and Epidemiological Perspective

herausgegeben von E. Tabeau, Anneke van den Berg Jeths und Christopher Heathcote
Mitwirkende
Herausgegeben vonE. Tabeau
Herausgegeben vonAnneke van den Berg Jeths
Herausgegeben vonChristopher Heathcote

Information on future mortality trends is essential for population forecasts, public health policy, actuarial studies, and many other purposes. Realising the importance of such needs, this volume contains contributions to the theory and practice of forecasting mortality in the relatively favourable circumstances in developed countries of Western Europe.
In this context techniques from mathematical statistics and econometrics can provide useful descriptions of past mortality. The naive forecast obtained by extrapolating a fitted model may give as good a forecast as any but forecasting by extrapolation requires careful justification since it assumes the prolongation of historical conditions. On the other hand, whilst it is generally accepted that scientific and other advances will continue to impact on mortality, perhaps dramatically so, it is impossible to quantify more than the outline of future consequences with a strong degree of confidence. The decision to modify an extrapolation of a model fitted to historical data (or conversely choosing not to modify it) in order to obtain a forecast is therefore strongly influenced by subjective and judgmental elements, with the quality of the latter dependent on demographic, epidemiological and indeed perhaps more general considerations. The thread running through the book reflects therefore the necessity of integrating demographic, epidemiological, and statistical factors to obtain an improvement in the prediction of mortality.