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Disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) for 291 diseases and injuries in 21 regions, 1990–2010: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010

Authors
Christopher Murray,E. Dorsey
Tim Driscoll,Herbert Duber,Beth Ebel,Karen Edmond,Suad Ali,Patricia Erwin,Farshad Farzadfar,Valery Feigin,Alize Ferrari,Mariel Finucane,Seth Flaxman,Kyle Foreman,Sherine Gabriel,Flavio Gaspari,Giorgia Giussani,Diego González-Medina,Yara Halasa,Diana Haring,James Harrison,Roderick Hay,Bruno Hoën,Peter Hotez,Kathryn Jacobsen,Spencer James,Sudha Jayaraman,Nicole Johns,Ganesan Karthikeyan,Andre Keren,Lisa Knowlton,Olive Kobusingye,Adofo Koranteng,Rita Krishnamurthi,Michael Lipnick,David Felson,Frederick Wolfe,Theo Vos,Rafael Lozano,Mohsen Naghavi,Florian Fischer,Catherine Michaud,Majid Ezzati,Kenji Shibuya,Joshua Salomon,Safa Abdalla,Victor Aboyans,Jerry Abraham,Ilana Ackerman,Rakesh Aggarwal,Stephanie Ahn,Mohammed Ali,Mohammad AlMazroa,H Anderson,Laurie Anderson,Kathryn Andrews,Ala’a Alkerwi,Larry Baddour,Adil Bahalim,Suzanne Barker‐Collo,Lope Barrero,David Bartels,María‐Gloria Basáñez,Amanda Baxter,Michelle Bell,Emelia Benjamin,Derrick Bennett,Eduardo Bernabé,Kavi Bhalla,Bishal Bhandari,Boris Bikbov,Pardeep Jhund,Gretchen Birbeck,James Black,Hannah Blencowe,Jed Blore,Fiona Blyth,Ian Bolliger,Audrey Bonaventure,Soufiane Boufous,Rupert Bourne,Michel Boussinesq,Tasanee Braithwaite,Carol Brayne,Lisa Bridgett,Simon Brooker,Peter Brooks,Traolach Brugha,Claire Bryan-Hancock,Chiara Bucello,Rachelle Buchbinder,Geoffrey Buckle,Christine Budke,René Botnar,Peter Burney,Roy Burstein,Bianca Calabria,Benjamin Campbell,Charles Canter,Renata Ivanek,Jonathan Carapetis,Loreto Carmona,Claudia Cella,Fiona Charlson,Honglei Chen,Andrew Cheng,David Chou,Sumeet Chugh,Luc Coffeng,Samantha Colquhoun,K. Colson,John Condon,Leslie Cooper,Matthew Corriere,Monica Cortinovis,Karen Courville,William Couser,Benjamin Cowie,Marita Cross,Kaustubh Dabhadkar,Manu Dahiya,Nabila Dahodwala,James Damsere-Derry,Goodarz Danaei,Adrian Davis,Leo Stockfelt,Louisa Degenhardt,Robert Dellavalle,Allyne Delossantos,Julie Denenberg,Sarah Derrett,Don Jarlais,Samath Dharmaratne,Mohammad Forouzanfar,F.G.R. Fowkes,Michael Freeman,Emmanuela Gakidou,Gerhard Gmel,Rebecca Grainger,Bridget Grant,David Gunnell,Wayne Hall,Rasmus Havmoeller,Damian Hoy,S Ibeanusi,Rashmi Jasrasaria,Jost Jonas,Nicholas Kassebaum,Norito Kawakami,Jon‐Paul Khoo,Stephen Lim,Aliya Naheed,George Mensah,Tony Merriman,André Kengne,Neil Pearce,Scott Patten,Ali Mokdad,Mukesh Dherani
+157 authors
,Young-Ho Khang
Journal
Published
Dec 1, 2012
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Abstract

Summary

Background

Measuring disease and injury burden in populations requires a composite metric that captures both premature mortality and the prevalence and severity of ill-health. The 1990 Global Burden of Disease study proposed disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) to measure disease burden. No comprehensive update of disease burden worldwide incorporating a systematic reassessment of disease and injury-specific epidemiology has been done since the 1990 study. We aimed to calculate disease burden worldwide and for 21 regions for 1990, 2005, and 2010 with methods to enable meaningful comparisons over time.

Methods

We calculated DALYs as the sum of years of life lost (YLLs) and years lived with disability (YLDs). DALYs were calculated for 291 causes, 20 age groups, both sexes, and for 187 countries, and aggregated to regional and global estimates of disease burden for three points in time with strictly comparable definitions and methods. YLLs were calculated from age-sex-country-time-specific estimates of mortality by cause, with death by standardised lost life expectancy at each age. YLDs were calculated as prevalence of 1160 disabling sequelae, by age, sex, and cause, and weighted by new disability weights for each health state. Neither YLLs nor YLDs were age-weighted or discounted. Uncertainty around cause-specific DALYs was calculated incorporating uncertainty in levels of all-cause mortality, cause-specific mortality, prevalence, and disability weights.

Findings

Global DALYs remained stable from 1990 (2·503 billion) to 2010 (2·490 billion). Crude DALYs per 1000 decreased by 23% (472 per 1000 to 361 per 1000). An important shift has occurred in DALY composition with the contribution of deaths and disability among children (younger than 5 years of age) declining from 41% of global DALYs in 1990 to 25% in 2010. YLLs typically account for about half of disease burden in more developed regions (high-income Asia Pacific, western Europe, high-income North America, and Australasia), rising to over 80% of DALYs in sub-Saharan Africa. In 1990, 47% of DALYs worldwide were from communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional disorders, 43% from non-communicable diseases, and 10% from injuries. By 2010, this had shifted to 35%, 54%, and 11%, respectively. Ischaemic heart disease was the leading cause of DALYs worldwide in 2010 (up from fourth rank in 1990, increasing by 29%), followed by lower respiratory infections (top rank in 1990; 44% decline in DALYs), stroke (fifth in 1990; 19% increase), diarrhoeal diseases (second in 1990; 51% decrease), and HIV/AIDS (33rd in 1990; 351% increase). Major depressive disorder increased from 15th to 11th rank (37% increase) and road injury from 12th to 10th rank (34% increase). Substantial heterogeneity exists in rankings of leading causes of disease burden among regions.

Interpretation

Global disease burden has continued to shift away from communicable to non-communicable diseases and from premature death to years lived with disability. In sub-Saharan Africa, however, many communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional disorders remain the dominant causes of disease burden. The rising burden from mental and behavioural disorders, musculoskeletal disorders, and diabetes will impose new challenges on health systems. Regional heterogeneity highlights the importance of understanding local burden of disease and setting goals and targets for the post-2015 agenda taking such patterns into account. Because of improved definitions, methods, and data, these results for 1990 and 2010 supersede all previously published Global Burden of Disease results.

Funding

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

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