Years of Potential Life Lost

Years of potential life lost (YPLL) or potential years of life lost (PYLL), is an estimate of the average years a person would have lived if he or she had not died prematurely. It is, therefore, a measure of premature mortality. As a method, it is an alternative to death rates that gives more weight to deaths that occur among younger people. Another alternative is to consider the effects of both disability and premature death using disability adjusted life years.

Read more about Years Of Potential Life Lost:  Calculation, Significance, By Country

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    In the years of President Ford
    Decorum and calm were restored.
    He did nothing hateful
    For which we were grateful
    But terribly, terribly bored.
    Anonymous.

    ... it is use, and use alone, which leads one of us, tolerably trained to recognize any criterion of grace or any sense of the fitness of things, to tolerate ... the styles of dress to which we are more or less conforming every day of our lives. Fifty years hence they will seem to us as uncultivated as the nose-rings of the Hottentot seem today.
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    Children are potentially free and their life directly embodies nothing save potential freedom. Consequently they are not things and cannot be the property either of their parents or others.
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    I never read a novel, they have so little real life and thought in them.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    When shall we three meet again?
    In thunder, lightning, or in rain?
    When the hurly-burly’s done,
    When the battle’s lost and won.
    William Shakespeare (1564–1616)