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Life-years lost

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The life-years lost or years of lost life (YLL)[1] is a unit to measure the number of expected years of human life lost following an unexpected event, such as death by illness, crime or war.

Life-years lost is a flexible measure which have been used to measure the effects of overall mortality of non-communicable diseases,[1] drug misuse[1] and suicide,[1] epidemics (for example COVID-19 pandemic),[1][2] wars, and natural disasters such as earthquakes. Life-years lost are based on both the number of deaths and the age of those who died. It estimates the number of years that those who died would have lived if they did not met their accidental a deadly fate. Higher YLLs can be due to larger numbers of death, few sharply younger deaths or some combination of the two.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Quast, Troy; Andel, Ross; Gregory, Sean; Storch, Eric A (2020-09-07). "Years of life lost associated with COVID-19 deaths in the United States". Journal of Public Health. 42 (4): 717–722. doi:10.1093/pubmed/fdaa159. ISSN 1741-3842. PMC 7499646. PMID 32894287.
  2. ^ Mitra, Amal K.; Payton, Marinelle; Kabir, Nusrat; Whitehead, April; Ragland, Kimberly N.; Brown, Alexis (June 2020). "Potential Years of Life Lost Due to COVID-19 in the United States, Italy, and Germany: An Old Formula with Newer Ideas". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 17 (12): 4392. doi:10.3390/ijerph17124392. ISSN 1661-7827. PMC 7345973. PMID 32570888.