- Life tables provide a comprehensive method to describe mortality, survival, and other vital events in a population by showing how a group of infants would gradually die under constant conditions. They provide measures of longevity and are constructed separately for males and females.
- John Graunt and Edmund Halley were early contributors to developing life tables in the 17th century. Life tables are important for calculating life expectancy, comparing mortality among communities, survival after treatment, and analyzing causes of death.
- The construction of a life table begins with a cohort (group born at the same time) and provides an age-specific account of mortality through values like number surviving and number of deaths at each age interval.
3. Introduction:
Life table:
Life table is a comprehensive method of describing mortality,
survival and other vital events in a population.
It is composed of several sets of values showing how a group of
infants who are under unchanging conditions would gradually die.
It provides concise measures of longevity of that population.
Separate tables are prepared for males and females after each
decennium census.
It is also called as the “Biometer” of the population by William Farr.
4. History of Life table:
John Graunt (1620-1674) - Natural and
Political Observations Made upon the Bills
of Mortality (1662)
Edmund Halley (1656 – 1742) –
‘An estimate of the Degree of the
Mortality of Mankind drawn from
the curious Table of the Births and
Funerals at the city of Breslaw’
6. Importance of Life table:
Calculation of expectation of life and
comparison of mortality among communities
Population studies
Survival rate after treatment
Analysis by causes of death
7. Standard Notations
Px Midyear population between ages x and x+1
Dx Number of deaths between ages x and x+1
mx Age-specific death rate
ax
Average fraction of the last year of life lived by those living between
x and x+1
qx Probability of dying between age x and x+1
lx Number of people surviving to age x out of the life tablecohort
dx Number of deaths between age x and x+n out of the life table cohort
Lx Number of person years lived between age x and x+1
Tx Total number of person years lived after age x
ex Life expectancy at age x
8.
9. Construction of Life table
Life Tables provide an age-specific account of mortality. The
construction of a life table begins with a cohort - a group of
individuals born in the same period of time.
Life Tables Provide a Schedule of Age-Specific Mortality and
Survival.
x nx
0 530
1 159
2 80
3 48
4 21
5 5
11. x nx dx .
0-1 530 371
1-2 159 79
2-3 80 32
3-4 48 27
4-5 21 16
5-6 5 5
dx = an estimate of
age-specific mortality.
This is the number of
individuals that died
during any given time
interval.
159 - 80
530 - 159
12. x nx dx qx .
0-1 530 371 0.70
1-2 159 79 0.50
2-3 80 32 0.40
3-4 48 27 0.55
4-5 21 16 0.75
5-6 5 5 1.00
qx = an estimate of age-
specific mortality.
371/530
79/159
14. Age
Class
f (x) d (x) l (x) q (x) Age
Class
f (x) d (x) l (x) q (x)
1 121 Y 1000 12 22
2 16 13 31
3 16 14 32
4 26 15 19
5 24 16 23
6 20 17 18
7 29 18 8
8 26 19 0
9 21 20 0
10 10 21 0
11 19 22 0
Total X Z W 0.0
15. Types of life table:
Different Life Tables Reflect Different Approaches to defining
Cohorts and Age Structure.
Dynamic Life Table – Following the fate (cohort) of a group of
individuals born at a given time (year).
Time-specific Life Table – One sample period assumes: constant birth and death
rates each cohort sample according to actual population proportions.
18. Uses of life table:
Life table helps to study population growth and fore cast the
size of the population.
Life tables provide a schedule of age-specific mortality and
survival.
It enables the demography to estimate the true rate of
increasing the population
We can estimate school- going population future labour force,
future orphans etc., through the use of life tables
It helps to analyze the effects of mortality on the
age and sex composition of population.