How to measure premature mortality? A proposal combining “relative” and “absolute” approaches

Stefano Mazzuco, Marc Suhrcke, Silvia Zanotto

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The concept of “premature mortality” is at the heart of many national and global health measurement and benchmarking efforts. However, despite the intuitive appeal of its underlying concept, it is far from obvious how to best operationalise it. The previous work offers at least two basic approaches: an absolute and a relative one. The former—and far more widely used— approach sets a unique age threshold (e.g. 65 years), below which deaths are defined as premature. The relative approach derives the share of premature deaths from the country-specific age distribution of deaths in the country of interest. The biggest disadvantage of the absolute approach is that of using a unique, arbitrary threshold for different mortality patterns, while the main disadvantage of the relative approach is that its estimate of premature mortality strongly depends on how the senescent deaths distribution is defined in each country.
Original languageEnglish
JournalPopulation Health Metrics
Volume19
Issue number41
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26 Oct 2021

Keywords

  • premature mortality
  • health
  • relative approaches
  • absolute approaches

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