Compara mètodes
Revisa els mètodes seleccionats l'un al costat de l'altre; les files que difereixen es ressalten.
| Years of Life Lost× | Anàlisi de taules de mortalitat× | |
|---|---|---|
| Camp | Demografia | Demografia |
| Família≠ | Process / pipeline | Survival analysis |
| Any d'origen≠ | 1994 | 1984 |
| Autor original≠ | Premature-mortality measure; standardized form by Christopher Murray (Global Burden of Disease) | Demographic/actuarial tradition; Chiang |
| Tipus≠ | Burden-of-disease measure of life-years lost to early death | Age-structured mortality estimator |
| Font seminal≠ | Murray, C. J. L. (1994). Quantifying the burden of disease: the technical basis for disability-adjusted life years. Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 72(3), 429–445. link ↗ | Chiang, C. L. (1984). The Life Table and Its Applications. Robert E. Krieger Publishing. ISBN: 978-0-89874-565-2 |
| Àlies≠ | YLL, Years of Potential Life Lost, Premature Mortality Years Lost | Mortality Table, Actuarial Table, Survival Table, Yaşam Tablosu |
| Relacionats≠ | 4 | 3 |
| Resum≠ | Years of life lost (YLL) measures the burden of premature mortality by counting, for every death, how many additional years the person could have expected to live had they survived to a reference life expectancy. Summed over all deaths, YLL turns a count of deaths into a count of lost life-years, so that deaths at young ages weigh far more heavily than deaths in old age. It is the mortality half of the disability-adjusted life year (DALY) and a core metric of the Global Burden of Disease studies, letting analysts rank diseases and injuries by how much potential life they destroy rather than merely by how many people they kill. | A life table is a systematic, age-structured summary of the mortality experience of a population. It traces a hypothetical cohort of births — conventionally 100,000 — through successive age intervals, recording how many survive, how many die, and how many person-years are lived at each interval. The method was formalized in its modern probabilistic form by Chiang (1984), synthesizing centuries of actuarial and demographic practice into a rigorous statistical framework applicable to human and biological populations alike. |
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