Begg Stephen J
La Trobe Rural Health School, La Trobe University, PO Box 199, Bendigo, Vic. 3550, Australia. Email:
Aust Health Rev. 2014 Feb;38(1):1-5. doi: 10.1071/AH13114.
To explore the likely impact of future trajectories of morbidity and mortality in Australia.
Estimates of mortality and morbidity were obtained from a previous assessment of Australia's health from 1993 to 2003, including projections to 2023. Outcomes of interest were the difference between life expectancy (LE0) and health-adjusted life expectancy (i.e. absolute lost health expectancy (ALHE0)), ALHE0 as a proportion of LE0 and the partitioning of changes in ALHE0 into additive contributions from changes in age- and cause-specific mortality and morbidity.
Actual and projected trajectories of mortality and morbidity resulted in an expansion of ALHE0 of 1.22 years between 1993 and 2023, which was equivalent to a relative expansion of 0.7% in morbidity over the life course. Most (93.8%) of this expansion was accounted for by cardiovascular disease, diabetes and cancer; of these, the only unfavourable trend of any note was increasing morbidity from diabetes.
Time spent with morbidity will most likely increase in terms of numbers of years lived and as a proportion of the average life span. This conclusion is based on the expectation that gains in LE0 will continue to exceed gains in ALHE0, and has important implications for public policy. WHAT IS KNOWN ABOUT THE TOPIC? Although the aging of Australia's population as a result of declining birth and death rates is well understood, its relationship with levels of morbidity is not always fully appreciated. This is most noticeable in the policy discourse on primary prevention, in which such activities are sometimes portrayed as having unrealised potential with respect to alleviating growth in health service demand. WHAT DOES THIS PAPER ADD? This paper sheds new light on these relationships by exploring the likely impact of future trajectories of both morbidity and mortality within an additive partitioning framework. The results suggest a modest expansion of morbidity over the life course, most of which is accounted for by only three causes. In two of these (cardiovascular disease and cancer), the underlying trends in both mortality and morbidity have been favourable for some time due, at least in part, to success in primary prevention. WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTITIONERS? Although there may be good arguments in favour of a greater focus on primary prevention as currently practiced, reducing overall demand for health services is unlikely to be one of them. To make such an argument valid, policy makers should consider shifting their attention to the effectiveness of primary prevention as it relates to causes other than cardiovascular disease and cancer, particularly those with a predominantly non-fatal impact, such as diabetes and degenerative diseases of old age.
探讨澳大利亚未来发病率和死亡率变化轨迹可能产生的影响。
死亡率和发病率的估计数据来自之前对1993年至2003年澳大利亚健康状况的评估,包括到2023年的预测。关注的结果包括预期寿命(LE0)与健康调整预期寿命之间的差异(即绝对健康预期寿命损失(ALHE0))、ALHE0占LE0的比例,以及将ALHE0的变化分解为年龄和死因别死亡率及发病率变化的累加贡献。
死亡率和发病率的实际及预测变化轨迹导致1993年至2023年期间ALHE0增加了1.22年,这相当于一生中发病率相对增加了0.7%。这种增加大部分(93.8%)由心血管疾病、糖尿病和癌症导致;其中,唯一值得注意的不利趋势是糖尿病发病率上升。
患病人数占总寿命年数以及占平均寿命的比例很可能会增加。这一结论基于预期寿命的增加将继续超过健康调整预期寿命的增加这一预期,并且对公共政策具有重要意义。关于该主题已知什么?尽管由于出生率和死亡率下降导致澳大利亚人口老龄化已广为人知,但其与发病率水平的关系并不总是得到充分认识。这在关于一级预防的政策讨论中最为明显,在这种讨论中,此类活动有时被描述为在缓解卫生服务需求增长方面具有未实现的潜力。本文补充了什么?本文通过在累加分解框架内探讨发病率和死亡率未来变化轨迹可能产生的影响,为这些关系提供了新的见解。结果表明一生中发病率有适度增加,其中大部分仅由三种病因导致。在其中两种病因(心血管疾病和癌症)中,死亡率和发病率的潜在趋势在一段时间内一直呈有利态势,至少部分原因是一级预防取得了成功。对从业者有何启示?尽管可能有充分理由支持如当前所实行的那样更加注重一级预防,但降低对卫生服务的总体需求不太可能是其中之一。要使这一论点成立,政策制定者应考虑将注意力转向一级预防与心血管疾病和癌症以外病因的有效性,特别是那些主要产生非致命影响的病因,如糖尿病和老年退行性疾病。