Healthy Life Expectancy Decomposition
Healthy (or disability-free) life expectancy combines how long people live with how much of that life is spent in good health, and differences in it between groups or over time reflect two distinct forces: changes in mortality and changes in the prevalence of disability. Healthy-life-expectancy decomposition separates these forces. Building on the Sullivan method — which weights life-table person-years by the age-specific share of life lived without disability — Wilma Nusselder and Caspar Looman's 2004 method splits the gap in health expectancy between two populations into an additive mortality component and a disability component for each age, and can further attribute each to specific causes. This resolves the central interpretive ambiguity of health expectancy: a population can have higher healthy life expectancy because its people die later, because they are less disabled at each age, or both, and only a decomposition can tell which.
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Sources
- Nusselder, W. J., & Looman, C. W. N. (2004). Decomposition of differences in health expectancy by cause. Demography, 41(2), 315-334. DOI: 10.1353/dem.2004.0017 ↗
- Sullivan, D. F. (1971). A single index of mortality and morbidity. HSMHA Health Reports, 86(4), 347-354. link ↗
How to cite this page
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Decomposition of Differences in Healthy (Disability-Free) Life Expectancy. ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/en/social-epidemiology/healthy-life-expectancy-decomposition
Which method?
Set this method beside its closest kin and read them side by side — the library lays the books on the table; the choice is yours.
- Abridged Life TableSocial Epidemiology↔ compare
- Healthy Life ExpectancyDemography↔ compare
- Life Expectancy DecompositionSocial Epidemiology↔ compare
- Sullivan MethodDemography↔ compare