Measuring health and economic wellbeing in the Sustainable Development Goals era: development of a poverty-free life expectancy metric and estimates for 90 countries

Background: The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), adopted in September, 2015, emphasise the link between health and economic development policies. Despite this link, and the multitude of targets and indicators in the SDGs and other initiatives, few monitoring tools explicitly incorporate measure...

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Published in:The Lancet Global Health
Main Authors: Riumallo-Herl, C. (Carlos), Canning, D. (David), Salomon, J.A. (Joshua A)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repub.eur.nl/pub/109310
https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30277-8
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spelling ftunivrotterdam:oai:repub.eur.nl:109310 2023-07-16T03:59:14+02:00 Measuring health and economic wellbeing in the Sustainable Development Goals era: development of a poverty-free life expectancy metric and estimates for 90 countries Riumallo-Herl, C. (Carlos) Canning, D. (David) Salomon, J.A. (Joshua A) 2018-08-01 application/pdf http://repub.eur.nl/pub/109310 https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30277-8 en eng http://repub.eur.nl/pub/109310 doi:10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30277-8 urn:hdl:1765/109310 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess The Lancet Global Health vol. 6 no. 8, pp. e843-e858 info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2018 ftunivrotterdam https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30277-8 2023-06-26T22:39:52Z Background: The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), adopted in September, 2015, emphasise the link between health and economic development policies. Despite this link, and the multitude of targets and indicators in the SDGs and other initiatives, few monitoring tools explicitly incorporate measures of both health and economic status. Here we propose poverty-free life expectancy (PFLE) as a new metric that uses widely available data to provide a composite measure of population health and economic wellbeing. Methods: We developed a population-level measure of PFLE and computed this summary measure for 90 countries with available data. Specifically, we used Sullivan's method, as in many health expectancy measures, to incorporate the prevalence of poverty by age and sex from household economic surveys into demographic life tables based on mortality rates from the 2015 Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD). For comparison, we also recalculated all PFLE measures using life tables from WHO and the UN. PFLE estimates for each country, stratified by sex, are the average number of poverty-free years a person could expect to live if exposed to current mortality rates and poverty prevalence in that country. Findings: The average PFLE in the 90 countries included in this study was 66·0 years (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 64·5–67·3) for females and 61·6 years (60·1–62·9) for males, whereas life expectancy estimates were 76·3 years (95% UI 74·0–78·2) for females and 71·0 years (68·7–73·0) for males. PFLE varied widely between countries, ranging from 9·9 years (95% UI 9·1–10·5) for both sexes combined in Malawi, to 83·2 years (83·0–83·5) in Iceland, the latter differing only marginally from life expectancy in that country. In 67 of 90 countries, the difference between life expectancy and PFLE was greater for females than for males, indicating that women generally live more years of life in poverty than men do. Results were consistent when using GBD, WHO, or UN life tables. Interpretation: Differences in PFLE between countries ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland RePub - Publications from Erasmus University, Rotterdam The Lancet Global Health 6 8 e843 e858
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collection RePub - Publications from Erasmus University, Rotterdam
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description Background: The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), adopted in September, 2015, emphasise the link between health and economic development policies. Despite this link, and the multitude of targets and indicators in the SDGs and other initiatives, few monitoring tools explicitly incorporate measures of both health and economic status. Here we propose poverty-free life expectancy (PFLE) as a new metric that uses widely available data to provide a composite measure of population health and economic wellbeing. Methods: We developed a population-level measure of PFLE and computed this summary measure for 90 countries with available data. Specifically, we used Sullivan's method, as in many health expectancy measures, to incorporate the prevalence of poverty by age and sex from household economic surveys into demographic life tables based on mortality rates from the 2015 Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD). For comparison, we also recalculated all PFLE measures using life tables from WHO and the UN. PFLE estimates for each country, stratified by sex, are the average number of poverty-free years a person could expect to live if exposed to current mortality rates and poverty prevalence in that country. Findings: The average PFLE in the 90 countries included in this study was 66·0 years (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 64·5–67·3) for females and 61·6 years (60·1–62·9) for males, whereas life expectancy estimates were 76·3 years (95% UI 74·0–78·2) for females and 71·0 years (68·7–73·0) for males. PFLE varied widely between countries, ranging from 9·9 years (95% UI 9·1–10·5) for both sexes combined in Malawi, to 83·2 years (83·0–83·5) in Iceland, the latter differing only marginally from life expectancy in that country. In 67 of 90 countries, the difference between life expectancy and PFLE was greater for females than for males, indicating that women generally live more years of life in poverty than men do. Results were consistent when using GBD, WHO, or UN life tables. Interpretation: Differences in PFLE between countries ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Riumallo-Herl, C. (Carlos)
Canning, D. (David)
Salomon, J.A. (Joshua A)
spellingShingle Riumallo-Herl, C. (Carlos)
Canning, D. (David)
Salomon, J.A. (Joshua A)
Measuring health and economic wellbeing in the Sustainable Development Goals era: development of a poverty-free life expectancy metric and estimates for 90 countries
author_facet Riumallo-Herl, C. (Carlos)
Canning, D. (David)
Salomon, J.A. (Joshua A)
author_sort Riumallo-Herl, C. (Carlos)
title Measuring health and economic wellbeing in the Sustainable Development Goals era: development of a poverty-free life expectancy metric and estimates for 90 countries
title_short Measuring health and economic wellbeing in the Sustainable Development Goals era: development of a poverty-free life expectancy metric and estimates for 90 countries
title_full Measuring health and economic wellbeing in the Sustainable Development Goals era: development of a poverty-free life expectancy metric and estimates for 90 countries
title_fullStr Measuring health and economic wellbeing in the Sustainable Development Goals era: development of a poverty-free life expectancy metric and estimates for 90 countries
title_full_unstemmed Measuring health and economic wellbeing in the Sustainable Development Goals era: development of a poverty-free life expectancy metric and estimates for 90 countries
title_sort measuring health and economic wellbeing in the sustainable development goals era: development of a poverty-free life expectancy metric and estimates for 90 countries
publishDate 2018
url http://repub.eur.nl/pub/109310
https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30277-8
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op_source The Lancet Global Health vol. 6 no. 8, pp. e843-e858
op_relation http://repub.eur.nl/pub/109310
doi:10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30277-8
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(18)30277-8
container_title The Lancet Global Health
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