Title: Summary measures of population health
1Summary measures of population health
- M Stud in Public Health
- 2002-3
2 3The drive to quantification for policy purposes
- Key document
- World Bank, Investing in health, WDR, 1993
- Background
- Confounding of specialist knowledge and advocacy
- Schooling and health services as investment in
human capital
4Central ideas
- Economic rationalisation
- Ie Using estimates of health benefit per spent
as the main guide to public health policy - Requires
- Robust summary measure of health
- Assumes
- Health mainly depends on resources purchaseable
with money
5Dean Jamison
- Directed the production of Investing in health
- Ph.D., Economics, Harvard University, 1970
Professor of Social Research MethodsJoint
Appointment to School of Public HealthDirector,
Center for Pacific Rim Studies2002-4 NIH - Adviser to World Bank and WHO
- Areas of Interest (from UCLA www)
- Economics of educational reform in the United
States economic aspects of health sector policy
in developing countries and health and
nutritional determinants of children's
educational performance.
6Chris Murray
- D.Phil., 1988, Oxford University M.D., 1991,
Harvard University Professor of International
Health Economics - Formerly, Director of Global Burden of Disease
Unit, Center for Population and Development
Studies, Harvard - Director, Global Programme on Evidence for Health
Policy, WHO Geneva - Professor of Public Health, Oxford declined
7Global Burden of Disease, 1996-
- World Bank, WHO
- Theoretical basis for the WDR of 1993
- Estimates for all global regions of burden of
disease in 1990 - Main measure DALY
8The Global Burden of Disease methodology
- Measures healthy time lost from both fatal and
non-fatal conditions - Units Disability Adjusted Life Years
- DALYs lost can be attributed to
- Contributing diseases and injuries
- Causes
- Draws on - demography
- - epidemiology
- - economics
9(No Transcript)
10World Health Report 2000
- Used
- Disability Adjusted Life Expectancy (DALE)
- as summary measure of population health
11Rankings for attainment
12Rankings for performance
13Reactions?
- Sporadic apoplexy!
- Political and peer review processes
- Sudhir Anand chairs peer group
- Special web site
- http//www.who.int/health-systems-performance/docs
/listofdebates.htm
14(No Transcript)
15Summary measures of population health
- Are already playing a major role in international
public health policy - Exploring these measures from an epidemiological
perspective will be a major theme of this module
16Summary measures of health Essence
- Combine information on mortality and non-fatal
health states to measure levels of health in
populations - Intrinsically normative
- In construction and use
17Uses
- Comparing health levels in populations
- Comparing health levels in 1 population at
different times - Measuring inequalities
- Giving appropriate attention to non-fatal
conditions - Informing consideration of priorities
18Unidimensional or multidimensional?
- Money is unidimensional!
- So resource allocation decisions
- even where only implicit
- imply a single ranking
19Summary measures
- Need to be distinguished from their data inputs
- Instruments to measure health / disability levels
in the living - are normative
- Choices and value judgements are used in their
construction and use
20Desirable attributes of summary measures of health
- Should be sensitive to all types of health loss
- cf measures using thresholds eg disability-free
life expectancy - Should only take account of age and sex
- not eg country of residence
- Should treat like health states as like
- Should use metric of time
- rather than event rates
21 22Deaths from stroke and RTAs comparisons on 2
measures, East Anglia 1990
23Deaths from stroke and RTAs comparisons on 2
measures, East Anglia 1990
Assuming all decedents would otherwise have
survived to 75
24Deaths from stroke and RTAs comparisons on 2
measures, East Anglia 1990
Assuming all decedents would otherwise have
survived to 75
25Occurrence measures in public health
- Studying causation
- Metric of incidence typically optimal
- Comparing health levels
- Metric of time typically optimal
- Ie time lived in specified health states
26Life tables yield average time lived
27(No Transcript)
28Summarising time spent at different health levels
- Divides each lifetime into
- A part lived in full health (A)
- A part lived in less than full health (B)
C
B
A
292 families of measures
- Health expectancies
- A f (B)
- Where full health 1
- Eg DALE
- Health gaps
- C g (B)
- Where 1 is equivalent to
death - Eg DALY
C
B
A
30Health expectancies
- Active life expectancy
- Disability-free life expectancy
- Disability-adjusted life expectancy (DALE)
- Years of healthy life
- Quality-adjusted life expectancy
- etc
31Attributes of health expectancies
- Period or cohort
- Calculation method
- Prevalence / double decrement / multi-state
- Definition and measurement of health
- Eg Active le lt- measures of ADL
- Methods used to value health states
- Incorporation of other values
32 f (B)
33Measuring health levels in the living
- Controversial
- Subjective preferences (utilities)
- Consistent with economic authodoxy
34- Self-reported health can show marked regressive
bias when used in comparisons between populations
35Life expectancy in India compared to the US, mid
1990s
Sen, BMJ 2002 324, 861
36Self-reported morbidity, India (mid-1970s) and US
(mid-1980s)
Sen, BMJ 2002 324, 861
37Measuring health levels in the living
- Controversial
- Subjective preferences (utilities)
- Consistent with economic authodoxy
- But, especially for group comparisons,
- Self reports subject to serious (regressive) bias
38Methods used to value health states
- Whose values
- Individuals in states / general public /
professionals / household carers - Type of valuation question
- Standard gamble / time trade-off / person
trade-off / visual analogue - How health states are presented
- Range of health states valued
- Valuation process ? deliberative
39Essence of health gaps (eg DALY)
- Amount of healthy life lost relative to some norm
40Attributes of health gaps (eg DALY)
- Implied target or norm
- Some vary with mortality level in population
- How health states defined measured
- ? Dimensions
- ? Self-perception vs observation
- Method used to value health states
- Inclusion of other values
- Eg Age-weighting, time-preference, equity weights
41Age structure dependence
- Health expectancies intrinsically age-independent
- Health gaps
- Age-dependent when expressed in absolute terms
- (DALYs lost in population X in year Y)
- But can be age-standardised
42Desirable properties of summary measures for
comparative uses
- Criteria for optimality of a measure should not
be confused with criteria for resource allocation - Murray et al use Rawlsian veil of ignorance
approach to specify criteria
43Criteria for summary measures for comparative uses
- If, for a given cause/health state in any
given age group, everything else being equal - Mortality ? ? measure ?
- Measures using gaps relative to current
population fail - Prevalence ? ? measure ?
- Incidence-based measures fail
- Incidence ? ? measure ?
- Prevalence-based measures fail
- Remission ? ? measure ?
- Severity (within a given state)? ? measure ?
44Other desirable properties of health measures
- Comprehensibility and feasibility
- Eg life expectancy does well despite complexity
- Additive decomposition
- Ie Total contribution of (a b c)
- For eg disease groups or risk factors
- All health expectancy measures fail
45- Losses (gaps) can be attributed to diseases or to
determinants - health expectancies can not
C
B
A
46Calculating the contribution of diseases,
injuries and causes
- Only possible with Gap measures
- Methods
- Categorical
- Eg ICD rules TB with HIV is assigned to HIV
- But ?myocardial infarction in diabetic or liver
cancer with chronic hep B - Counterfactual
- Compare current or future with expected under
specified alternative
47But health expectancies can be more readily
understood
- and so appeal to journalists and politicians
- DALE used in World Health Report 2000
C
B
A
48Health expectancies
- Active life expectancy
- Disability-free life expectancy
- Disability-adjusted life expectancy (DALE)
- Years of healthy life
- Quality-adjusted life expectancy
- etc
49Conclusions
- Some measures fail basic tests
- Eg those using internal mortality norms or
simple dichotomies for less than perfect health
(eg disability-free life expectancy) - None simultaneously fulfil prevalence and
incidence criteria - Only gap measures (eg DALYs) permit
decomposition by conditions and causes
50The marginalist critique (Williams et al)
- Summary measures (totals) not useful for policy
- What we need to know is the next best thing to do
at the margin - But
- why not use both totals and marginals?
- Totals also protect against partisan use of
epidemiology (disease advocacy)
51Conclusion
- The DALY is in use
- Its derivation and characteristics need to be
understood by public health professionals