健康寿命年指标的敏感性:处理特定年龄流行数据的方法

IF 1.5 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY
Vanessa di Lego, M. Sauerberg
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引用次数: 0

摘要

健康生命年(HLY)指标是欧洲联盟的官方指标,也是欧盟区域超过15个国家用于制定国家卫生计划和监测目标的许多卫生政策的基石。它还用于调查健康状况良好或健康状况不佳的生命年数所占比例的长期趋势、健康和死亡率方面的社会经济不平等以及男女健康生存悖论。根据欧盟收入和生活条件统计(EU-SILC)中包含的全球活动限制指标(GALI),人们已经做出了大量努力,以协调各国的HLY并使其具有可比性。尽管如此,尽管患病率的模式往往随年龄波动很大,但仍然很少考虑到具体年龄的患病率分布特征。此外,尽管欧盟一级的大多数政策和举措都使用出生时的健康寿命,但很少讨论幼年时使用的假设对健康寿命估计的影响,而健康数据仅在16岁以后可用。在本文中,我们评估了通过不同的方法平滑特定年龄的患病率分布,外推到更大的年龄和改变年轻年龄的假设是否会影响HLY估计。总的来说,在15岁之前做出的假设是最重要的,对女性和男性的影响是不同的,因此影响到一些国家出生时的新生儿死亡率。估计65岁的人受到的影响很小。广义线性模型(GAMs)似乎有希望协调和外推到更大的年龄,而使用多项式或汇总到5岁年龄组似乎最适合年轻人。由于大多数欧盟政策在制定和监测卫生政策时使用出生时的新生儿死亡率和按性别分列的新生儿死亡率,因此在估计出生时的新生儿死亡率时需要谨慎。*本文属于“健康预期的水平和趋势:了解其测量和估计敏感性”特刊。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Sensitivity of the Healthy Life Years Indicator: Approaches for Dealing with Age-Specific Prevalence Data
The Healthy Life Years (HLY) indicator is the official European Union indicator and a cornerstone of many health policies used in over 15 countries in the EU region to set national health plans and monitor targets. It is also used to investigate trends over time in the proportion of total life years spent in good or poor health, socioeconomic inequalities in health and mortality and the male-female health survival paradox. Based on the Global Activity Limitation Indicator (GALI) included in the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC), a great amount of effort has been directed at harmonising and making HLY comparable across countries. Nonetheless, the characteristics of the age-specific prevalence distribution are still rarely accounted for, regardless of the fact that patterns of prevalence often fluctuate considerably by age. In addition, the impact of assumptions used at very young ages on HLY estimates are seldom discussed, despite the fact that the majority of policies and initiatives at the EU level use HLY at birth, while data on health is only available after age 16. In this paper, we assess whether smoothing the age-specific prevalence distributions by different methods, extrapolating to older ages and changing assumptions at younger ages affect HLY estimates. Overall, assumptions made before age 15 are the most important and affect women and men differently, thus affecting HLY at birth for some countries. Estimates at age 65 are very slightly impacted. Generalised linear models (GAMs) seem promising for harmonising and extrapolating to older ages, while using polynomials or aggregating into 5-year age groups seem best for younger ages. As most EU policies use HLY at birth and by sex for developing and monitoring health policies, caution is needed when estimating HLY at birth. * This article belongs to a special issue on “Levels and Trends of Health Expectancy: Understanding its Measurement and Estimation Sensitivity”.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
15
审稿时长
26 weeks
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