Table 3.
Ethical standard of health equity | Target population | Individuals targeted | Equity criteria |
---|---|---|---|
Health sufficiency | High diabetes risk (≥16.5% DPoRT risk) | 3.84 Million | DPoRT risk <16.5% |
Health equality | Medium/high diabetes risk (≥5.0% DPoRT risk) | 9.87 Million | DPoRT risk <5.0% |
Social-health sufficiency | 1) Below highest education level; 2) High diabetes risk (≥16.5% DPoRT risk) |
3.04 Million | DPoRT risk <16.5% in individuals with Education below ‘Bachelor's degree’ |
Social-health equality | Below highest education level (≥6.0% DPoRT risk) | 6.67 Million | DPoRT risk <6.0% in individuals with Education below ‘Bachelor's degree’ |
Health sufficiency: equity is ‘achieved’ when diabetes risk in the entire population is reduced below a threshold (i.e., 16.5%), beyond which remaining inequalities are not considered ethically important to eliminate.
Health equality: equity is ‘achieved’ when average diabetes risk is equalized to that observed in the lowest diabetes risk group.
Social-health sufficiency: equity is ‘achieved’ when diabetes risk co-varying with lower educational attainment is reduced below a threshold (i.e., 16.5%), beyond which remaining inequalities are not considered ethically important to eliminate.
Social-health equality: equity is ‘achieved’ when diabetes risk among those with lower educational attainment is equalized to that observed with higher educational attainment.