Quantifying the burden of disease: the technical basis for disability-adjusted life years.
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- Vol. 72 (3), 429-45
Abstract
Detailed assumptions used in constructing a new indicator of the burden of disease, the disability-adjusted life year (DALY), are presented. Four key social choices in any indicator of the burden of disease are carefully reviewed. First, the advantages and disadvantages of various methods of calculating the duration of life lost due to a death at each age are discussed. DALYs use a standard expected-life lost based on model life-table West Level 26. Second, the value of time lived at different ages is captured in DALYs using an exponential function which reflects the dependence of the young and the elderly on adults. Third, the time lived with a disability is made comparable with the time lost due to premature mortality by defining six classes of disability severity. Assigned to each class is a severity weight between 0 and 1. Finally, a three percent discount rate is used in the calculation of DALYs. The formula for calculating DALYs based on these assumptions is provided.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Discounting in the Economic Evaluation of Health Care InterventionsMedical Care, 1993
- Recent Developments and Future Issues in the Use of Health Status Assessment Measures in Clinical SettingsMedical Care, 1992
- Discounting and health benefits: Another PerspectiveHealth Economics, 1992
- Discounting and health benefitsHealth Economics, 1992
- Methods for quality adjustment of life yearsSocial Science & Medicine, 1992
- On the Discounting of Gained life-Years in Cost-Effectiveness AnalysisInternational Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care, 1992
- Evaluating healthy days of life gained from health projectsSocial Science & Medicine, 1987
- Economics of coronary artery bypass grafting.BMJ, 1985
- Developing Multiattribute Health IndexesMedical Care, 1984
- Potential Years of Life Lost Between Ages 1 and 70: An Indicator of Premature Mortality for Health PlanningInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1977