A healthy bottom line: healthy life expectancy as an outcome measure for health improvement efforts
Stiefel, Matthew C. ; Perla, Rocco J. ; Zell, Bonnie L.
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UMass Chan Affiliations
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Keywords
Databases as Topic
Databases, Factual
Health Behavior
Health Promotion
*Health Status
Health Status Disparities
*Health Status Indicators
Humans
Life Expectancy
Medical Record Linkage
Mortality
Socioeconomic Factors
United States
Community Health and Preventive Medicine
Preventive Medicine
Primary Care
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Abstract
CONTEXT: Good health is the most important outcome of health care, and healthy life expectancy (HLE), an intuitive and meaningful summary measure combining the length and quality of life, has become a standard in the world for measuring population health.
METHODS: This article critically reviews the literature and practices around the world for measuring and improving HLE and synthesizes that information as a basis for recommendations for the adoption and adaptation of HLE as an outcome measure in the United States.
FINDINGS: This article makes the case for adoption of HLE as an outcome measure at the national, state, community, and health care system levels in the United States to compare the effectiveness of alternative practices, evaluate disparities, and guide resource allocation.
CONCLUSIONS: HLE is a clear, consistent, and important population health outcome measure that can enable informed judgments about value for investments in health care.
Source
Milbank Q. 2010 Mar;88(1):30-53. Link to article on publisher's site