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INTRODUCTION TO LIFE TABLE ANALYSIS

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Title: INTRODUCTION TO LIFE TABLE ANALYSIS


1
INTRODUCTION TO LIFE TABLE ANALYSIS
  • with applications to summary measures of
    population health

2
QUESTIONS
  • How long will we live, given a series of
    age-specific mortality risks? How many years
    would we gain if we could eliminate a particular
    cause of death?
  • How long will we live in good health, given a
    series of age-specific mortality and morbidity
    risks? How many years in good health do we
    currently loose as a result of a particular
    disease?
  • How can life table analysis be used to summarize
    the health of a population? How useful are these
    summary measures of population health?

3
CONTENTS
  • Simple life table calculation of life
    expectancy at birth
  • Cause-elimination life-table calculation of
    life expectancy at birth after elimination of a
    specific cause of death
  • Health expectancy calculation of life
    expectancy at birth, taking into account years
    spent in bad health
  • Disability-adjusted life years calculation of
    years in good health lost

4
SIMPLE LIFE TABLE (1)7 COLUMNS
5
SIMPLE LIFE TABLE (2) FIRST LINE
6
SIMPLE LIFE TABLE (3) HOW TO GET FROM COLUMN
2 TO COLUMN 7?
7
ABRIDGED LIFE TABLE, MEN, THENETHERLANDS, 1980 -
1984 (1)
8
ABRIDGED LIFE TABLE, MEN, THENETHERLANDS, 1980 -
1984 (2)
9
SIMPLE LIFE TABLE (4)SURVIVAL CURVE
10
SIMPLE LIFE TABLE (4) PERIOD VERSUS
COHORT LIFE TABLE
  • Most life tables are period life tables,
    calculated from age-specific mortality risks
    observed in a population during one period of
    time
  • Can only be interpreted as expectation of life,
    if one assumes that these cross-sectional
    mortality risks will continue to apply during the
    life-time of the cohort of 100000
  • Alternative cohort life-table, calculated from
    longitudinally observed mortality risks

11
COHORT LIFE TABLES Dutch men and
women 1891 - 1965
12
LIFE EXPECTANCY AT BIRTH (IN YEARS), MALES, 2003
13
CAUSE-ELIMINATION LIFE TABLE (1)
  • What would be life expectancy at birth if a
    specific cause of death would be eliminated?
  • Used for- quantification of potential effect of
    interventions
  • - quantification of (relative) importance of a
    cause of death

14
CAUSE-ELIMINATION LIFE-TABLE (2)
  • Modify qx
  • e.g. qx-i qx - qxi
  • in which
  • qx-i mortality risk in interval starting at x
    after elimination of cause i
  • qxi mortality risk in interval starting at x
    due to cause i only

15
CAUSE ELIMINATION LIFE TABLE (3)
16
CAUSE-ELIMINATION LIFE TABLE (4)
  • What difference would it make if cancer were
    suddenly eradicated as a cause of death?
  • Ca. 25 of all deaths but only 2.5 years
    (3.5) gain in life-expectancy Tauber paradox

17
CAUSE-ELIMINATION LIFE TABLE (5)
  • Explanation average age at death from cancer is
    high - death rates from other causes among those
    saved from cancer are high
  • In year after elimination of cancer, crude
    mortality rate may be up to 25 lower but in
    following years crude mortality rate will
    gradually increase again when survivors start to
    die from other causes
  • Actually, effects on life expectancy of
    eliminating cancer will be smaller still, due to
    common risk factors between cancer and other
    causes of death

18
SUMMARY MEASURES OF POPULATION HEALTH (1)
  • Health expectancy measures- Healthy life
    expectancy (HLE)- Disability-free life
    expectancy (DFLE)- Health-adjusted life
    expectancy (HALE)- Disability-adjusted life
    expectancy (DALE)
  • Health gap measures- Healthy life years (lost)
    (HeaLY) - Disability-adjusted life-years (lost)
    (DALY)

19
SUMMARY MEASURES OF POPULATION HEALTH (2)
20
HEALTH EXPECTANCY MEASURES
  • Usually calculated with Sullivan method,
    combining life table with prevalence of disease
    or disability- Take simple life table-
    Modify column 5 (years lived during interval)-
    For years spent in good health, multiply by (1
    prevalence) of bad health - For years
    adjusted for bad health, multiply by (1
    prevalence) of states of bad health , weigh
    years with severity weight between 0 and 1, and
    add
  • Alternative multistate life tables in which
    transitions from good health to bad health to
    death are modelled directly, i.e. combining life
    table with incidence of disease or disability

21
DISABILITY-ADJUSTED LIFE EXPECTANCY,
2000DISABILITY WEIGHTS USED IN CALCULATION
Source Murray Lopez 1997
22
DISABILITY-ADJUSTED LIFE EXPECTANCY, 2000MAIN
RESULTS FOR 8 WORLD REGIONS
Source Murray Lopez 1997. EMEEstablished
Market Economies, FSEFormer Soviet Economies,
CHNCHINA, LACLatin America and Caribbean,
OAIOther Asia and Islands, MEC Middle Eastern
Crescent, INDIndia, SSASub Saharan Africa
23
HEALTH GAP MEASURES
  • Inspired by measures of years of life lost due to
    premature mortality (e.g. Potential Years of Life
    Lost)
  • Measure difference between current situation and
    a health target (or norm), e.g. perfect health
    until the age of 80 years
  • Can (more easily than health expectancy measures)
    be used for attribution to risk factors

24
DISABILITY-ADJUSTED LIFE-YEARS (DALYs)CALCULATIO
N
  • DALY YLL YLDYLL Years of Life LostYLD
    Years Lived with Disability
  • YLL N x L N Number of deathsL Life
    expectancy at age of death in years
  • YLD I x DW x LI Incident casesDW
    Disability weightL Average duration of case
    until remission or death
  • (Additional) social preferences can be built in
    explicitly, e.g. by giving less weight to years
    lived and lost at older ages

25
DISABILITY-ADJUSTED LIFE-YEARS (DALYs)DIFFERENCE
S BETWEEN WORLD REGIONS
Source Lopez et al. 2006
26
DISABILITY-ADJUSTED LIFE-YEARS (DALYs) PROJECTED
CHANGES IN WORLD-WIDE RANK ORDER FOR 15 LEADING
CAUSES
Source Lopez Murray 1998
27
CONCLUSIONS
  • Life table analysis and its extensions
    (cause-elimination, health expectancy,
    health gaps) provide extremely powerful
    techniques for analysing population health
  • Important requirements for data collection (e.g.
    vital statistics, epidemiology of diseases and
    their consequences, severity weights), and
    necessary assumptions (e.g. age weights) should
    however not be overlooked
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