| Literature DB >> 31921418 |
Grant M A Wyper1, Ian Grant2, Eilidh Fletcher2, Neil Chalmers1, Gerry McCartney1, Diane L Stockton1.
Abstract
Severity distributions are a means of summarising the range of health loss suffered to disease which enables estimates of disease occurrence to be paired with disability weights to estimate Years Lost to Disability (YLD) in burden of disease studies. There is a lack of current data exploring severity distributions, which has led to the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study relying on using the same severity distributions across countries and regions across the world. This is also largely true for some national studies, although there are exceptions. Recent evidence has raised concerns that severity distributions are unlikely to be generalisable as major differences arise when using country-specific data to develop severity distributions. These issues raise uncertainties over interpreting YLD estimates, particularly if they are being used to develop and influence policies and to determine priorities across diseases and populations. It is clear that GBD researchers and those carrying out national studies need to work towards ensuring that estimates are based upon country-specific data, and, if possible, that the impact of assumptions are fully tested and understood. There is a lack of strategy about if, where, and how, this could be achieved, particularly around how efforts should be prioritised. This commentary advocates and presents a possible strategic approach to better understanding how efforts may be best placed.Entities:
Keywords: Burden of disease; DALY; EBODN; GBD; SBOD; Severity distribution; Summary measures of population health; YLD
Year: 2020 PMID: 31921418 PMCID: PMC6950931 DOI: 10.1186/s13690-019-0385-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Public Health ISSN: 0778-7367
Fig. 1: Rescaling severity distributions that include asymptomatic cases to obtain symptomatic severity distributions
Fig. 2: Potential variation in disability weight for the 20 leading non-communicable diseases of YLD in the European region, 2017.