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Published in: International Journal for Equity in Health 1/2018

Open Access 01-12-2018 | Research

Considering mean and inequality health outcomes together: the population health performance index

Authors: David Kindig, Nicholas Lardinois, Yukiko Asada, John Mullahy

Published in: International Journal for Equity in Health | Issue 1/2018

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Abstract

Background

The purpose was to develop and test a population health measure that combines mean health outcomes and inequalities into a single GDP-like metric to help policymakers measure population health performance on both dimensions in one metric.

Methods

The Population Health Performance Index is a weighted average of a mean index and an inequality index according to the user’s inequality aversion. We deploy this methodology for two combinations of health outcome and disparity domain: infant mortality by race and unhealthy days by education.

Results

The PHPI is bounded between 0 and 1, and is comprised of a weighted average of two separate indices: a mean index and an inequality index, with 1 representing the ideal state of no ill health and no inequality and 0 representing the worst state in the U.S. PHPI values across states (neutral 50:50 weighting) vary between 0.60 (Massachusetts) to 0.17 (Delaware) for infant mortality by race and between 0.65 (North Dakota) to 0.00 (West Virginia) for unhealthy days by education. For some states, the choice of inequality aversion significantly impacts their PHPI value and state rank.

Conclusions

Mean and inequality health outcomes can be combined into a single Population Health Performance Index for use by public and private policy makers, like the GDP is used as a summary metric to measure economic output. The index can allow for varying degrees of inequality aversion, an individual’s or jurisdiction’s value choice that can substantially impact the value of this new summary population health metric.
Literature
Metadata
Title
Considering mean and inequality health outcomes together: the population health performance index
Authors
David Kindig
Nicholas Lardinois
Yukiko Asada
John Mullahy
Publication date
01-12-2018
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
International Journal for Equity in Health / Issue 1/2018
Electronic ISSN: 1475-9276
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-018-0731-2

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