Abstract

AimTo collect, organize and appraise evidence of socioeconomic and demographic inequalities in health and mortality among the older population using a summary measure of population health: Health Expectancy.MethodsA systematic literature review was conducted. Literature published in English before November 2014 was searched via two possible sources: three electronic databases (Web of Science, Medline and Embase), and references in selected articles. The search was developed combining terms referring to outcome, exposure and participants, consisting in health expectancy, socioeconomic and demographic groups, and older population, respectively.ResultsOf 256 references identified, 90 met the inclusion criteria. Six references were added after searching reference lists of included articles. Thirty-three studies were focused only on gender-based inequalities; the remaining sixty-three considered gender along with other exposures. Findings were organized according to two leading perspectives: the type of inequalities considered and the health indicators chosen to measure health expectancy. Evidence of gender-based differentials and a socioeconomic gradient were found in all studies. A remarkable heterogeneity in the choice of health indicators used to compute health expectancy emerged as well as a non-uniform way of defining same health conditions.ConclusionsHealth expectancy is a useful and convenient measure to monitor and assess the quality of ageing and compare different groups and populations. This review showed a general agreement of results obtained in different studies with regard to the existence of inequalities associated with several factors, such as gender, education, behaviors, and race. However, the lack of a standardized definition of health expectancy limits its comparability across studies. The need of conceiving health expectancy as a comparable and repeatable measure was highlighted as fundamental to make it an informative instrument for policy makers.

Highlights

  • Between 2000 and 2050 the proportion of the world's population over 60 years is expected to double from about 11 percent to 22 percent, according to World Health Organization (WHO) estimates [1]

  • Findings were organized according to two leading perspectives: the type of inequalities considered and the health indicators chosen to measure health expectancy

  • Life expectancy has been used as an indicator of population health for long time, but with the completion of the "Epidemiological transition" and infectious diseases replacing chronic diseases [3], mortality has ceased to be as tied to health as it was before and life expectancy does no longer capture population’s health

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Summary

Introduction

Between 2000 and 2050 the proportion of the world's population over 60 years is expected to double from about 11 percent to 22 percent, according to WHO estimates [1]. Life expectancy has been used as an indicator of population health for long time, but with the completion of the "Epidemiological transition" and infectious diseases replacing chronic diseases [3], mortality has ceased to be as tied to health as it was before and life expectancy does no longer capture population’s health. This has led towards the development of a new measure, and in the 1960s the concept of health expectancy was first introduced [4,5]. This very basic definition of HE contains both the strength and limitation of this indicator

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