Public Safety Canada.
Health Rep. 2009 Dec;20(4):55-64.
Health-adjusted life expectancy is a summary measure of population health that combines mortality and morbidity data into a single index. This article profiles differences in health-adjusted life expectancy across income categories for a representative sample of the Canadian population.
Mortality data were obtained from the 1991-2001 Canadian census mortality follow-up study, which linked a 15% sample of the 1991 adult non-institutional population with 11 years of death records from the Canadian Mortality Data Base. Information on morbidity was obtained from the Health Utilities Index Mark 3 instrument on the 2000/2001 Canadian Community Health Survey. The Sullivan method was used to compute health-adjusted life expectancy for national deciles of population ranked by income.
For both sexes, and with few exceptions, a nearly linear gradient across income deciles emerged for health-adjusted life expectancy at age 25. Compared with people in higher-income deciles, those in lower-income deciles had fewer years of health-adjusted life expectancy. These disparities were substantially larger than those revealed by life expectancy alone.
These findings highlight the generally worse health-related quality of life of lower-income groups. The results demonstrate that assessments of socio-economic disparities in health should include the effects of both mortality and morbidity.
健康调整预期寿命是一项综合死亡率和发病率数据的人口健康综合指标。本文描述了加拿大代表性人群样本中按收入类别划分的健康调整预期寿命差异。
死亡率数据来自于 1991-2001 年加拿大人口普查死亡率随访研究,该研究将 1991 年 15%的成年非机构人口样本与加拿大死亡率数据库中 11 年的死亡记录相关联。发病率信息来自于 2000/2001 年加拿大社区健康调查中的健康效用指数标记 3 工具。使用沙利文方法计算按收入排序的人口全国十分位数的健康调整预期寿命。
对于两性来说,除了少数例外,25 岁时健康调整预期寿命在收入十分位数之间呈现出近乎线性的梯度。与高收入十分位数的人相比,低收入十分位数的人健康调整预期寿命更短。这些差异比仅通过预期寿命揭示的差异要大得多。
这些发现突出了低收入群体的健康相关生活质量普遍较差。结果表明,评估健康方面的社会经济差异时,应考虑死亡率和发病率的影响。