Departamento de Salud Pública, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Diagonal Paraguay 362, Piso 2, Santiago, Chile.
Unit of Health Technology Assessment, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Int J Equity Health. 2023 Aug 22;22(1):160. doi: 10.1186/s12939-023-01972-w.
Life expectancy (LE) has usually been used as a metric to monitor population health. In the last few years, metrics such as Quality-Adjusted-Life-Expectancy (QALE) and Health-Adjusted-Life- Expectancy (HALE) have gained popularity in health research, given their capacity to capture health related quality of life, providing a more comprehensive approach to the health concept. We aimed to estimate the distribution of the LE, QALEs and HALEs across Socioeconomic Status in the Chilean population.
Based on life tables constructed using Chiang II´s method, we estimated the LE of the population in Chile by age strata. Probabilities of dying were estimated from mortality data obtained from national registries. Then, life tables were stratified into five socioeconomic quintiles, based on age-adjusted years of education (pre-school, early years to year 1, primary level, secondary level, technical or university). Quality weights (utilities) were estimated for age strata and SES, using the National Health Survey (ENS 2017). Utilities were calculated using the EQ-5D data of the ENS 2017 and the validated value set for Chile. We applied Sullivan´s method to adjust years lived and convert them into QALEs and HALEs.
LE at birth for Chile was estimated in 80.4 years, which is consistent with demographic national data. QALE and HALE at birth were 69.8 and 62.4 respectively. Men are expected to live 6.1% less than women. However, this trend is reversed when looking at QALEs and HALEs, indicating the concentration of higher morbidity in women compared to men. The distribution of all these metrics across SES showed a clear gradient in favour of a better-off population-based on education quintiles. The absolute and relative gaps between the lowest and highest quintile were 15.24 years and 1.21 for LE; 18.57 HALYs and 1.38 for HALEs; and 21.92 QALYs and 1.41 for QALEs. More pronounced gradients and higher gaps were observed at younger age intervals.
The distribution of LE, QALE and HALEs in Chile shows a clear gradient favouring better-off populations that decreases over people´s lives. Differences in LE favouring women contrast with differences in HALEs and QALEs which favour men, suggesting the need of implementing gender-focused policies to address the case-mix complexity. The magnitude of inequalities is greater than in other high-income countries and can be explained by structural social inequalities and inequalities in access to healthcare.
预期寿命(LE)通常被用作监测人口健康的指标。在过去的几年中,由于能够捕捉与健康相关的生活质量,质量调整预期寿命(QALE)和健康调整预期寿命(HALE)等指标在健康研究中越来越受欢迎,为健康概念提供了更全面的方法。我们旨在估计智利人口中社会经济地位(SES)分布的 LE、QALEs 和 HALEs。
基于使用 Chiang II 方法构建的生命表,我们按年龄层估算了智利人口的 LE。通过从国家登记处获得的死亡率数据估计死亡概率。然后,根据年龄调整后的受教育年限(学前、小学至 1 年级、小学、中学、技术或大学),将生命表分为五个 SES 五分位数。使用国家健康调查(ENS 2017)为年龄层和 SES 估算质量权重(效用)。使用 ENS 2017 的 EQ-5D 数据和智利的验证价值集计算效用。我们应用 Sullivan 方法调整生存年数,并将其转换为 QALEs 和 HALEs。
智利出生时的 LE 估计为 80.4 岁,与人口统计学国家数据一致。出生时的 QALE 和 HALE 分别为 69.8 和 62.4。男性预期比女性少活 6.1%。然而,当观察 QALEs 和 HALEs 时,这种趋势发生了逆转,表明女性的发病率比男性更高。所有这些指标在 SES 中的分布都呈现出明显的梯度,有利于基于教育五分位数的富裕人群。最低五分位数和最高五分位数之间的绝对差距和相对差距分别为 15.24 年和 1.21 用于 LE;18.57 HALYs 和 1.38 用于 HALEs;21.92 QALYs 和 1.41 用于 QALEs。在更年轻的年龄间隔内观察到更明显的梯度和更高的差距。
智利 LE、QALE 和 HALEs 的分布呈现出有利于富裕人群的明显梯度,随着人们寿命的延长而逐渐减少。有利于女性的 LE 差异与有利于男性的 HALEs 和 QALEs 差异形成对比,表明需要实施以性别为重点的政策来解决病例组合的复杂性。不平等的幅度大于其他高收入国家,可以用结构性社会不平等和获得医疗保健的不平等来解释。