| Burden of 375 diseases and injuries, risk-attributable burden
of 88 risk factors, and healthy life expectancy in
204 countries and territories, including 660 subnational
locations, 1990–2023: a systematic analysis for the Global
Burden of Disease Study 2023 |
| Authors: |
GBD 2023 Disease and Injury and Risk Factor Collaborators |
| Source: |
Lancet, Volume 406, Issue 10513 |
| Topic(s): |
Modelling Morbidity
|
| Country: |
More than one region
Multiple Regions
|
| Published: |
OCT 2025 |
| Abstract: |
BACKGROUND: For more than three decades, the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) has
provided a framework to quantify health loss due to diseases, injuries, and associated risk factors. This paper presents
GBD 2023 findings on disease and injury burden and risk-attributable health loss, offering a global audit of the state
of world health to inform public health priorities. This work captures the evolving landscape of health metrics across
age groups, sexes, and locations, while reflecting on the remaining post-COVID-19 challenges to achieving our
collective global health ambitions.
METHODS: The GBD 2023 combined analysis estimated years lived with disability (YLDs), years of life lost (YLLs), and
disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) for 375 diseases and injuries, and risk-attributable burden associated with
88 modifiable risk factors. Of the more than 310 000 total data sources used for all GBD 2023 (about 30% of which
were new to this estimation round), more than 120 000 sources were used for estimation of disease and injury burden
and 59 000 for risk factor estimation, and included vital registration systems, surveys, disease registries, and published
scientific literature. Data were analysed using previously established modelling approaches, such as disease modelling
meta-regression version 2.1 (DisMod-MR 2.1) and comparative risk assessment methods. Diseases and injuries were
categorised into four levels on the basis of the established GBD cause hierarchy, as were risk factors using the GBD
risk hierarchy. Estimates stratified by age, sex, location, and year from 1990 to 2023 were focused on disease-specific
time trends over the 2010–23 period and presented as counts (to three significant figures) and age-standardised rates
per 100 000 person-years (to one decimal place). For each measure, 95% uncertainty intervals [UIs] were calculated
with the 2·5th and 97·5th percentile ordered values from a 250-draw distribution.
FINDINGS: Total numbers of global DALYs grew 6·1% (95% UI 4·0–8·1), from 2·64 billion (2·46–2·86) in 2010
to 2·80 billion (2·57–3·08) in 2023, but age-standardised DALY rates, which account for population growth and
ageing, decreased by 12·6% (11·0–14·1), revealing large long-term health improvements. Non-communicable
diseases (NCDs) contributed 1·45 billion (1·31–1·61) global DALYs in 2010, increasing to 1·80 billion (1·63–2·03)
in 2023, alongside a concurrent 4·1% (1·9–6·3) reduction in age-standardised rates. Based on DALY counts, the
leading level 3 NCDs in 2023 were ischaemic heart disease (193 million [176–209] DALYs), stroke (157 million
[141–172]), and diabetes (90·2 million [75·2–107]), with the largest increases in age-standardised rates since 2010
occurring for anxiety disorders (62·8% [34·0–107·5]), depressive disorders (26·3% [11·6–42·9]), and diabetes (14·9%
[7·5–25·6]). Remarkable health gains were made for communicable, maternal, neonatal, and nutritional (CMNN)
diseases, with DALYs falling from 874 million (837–917) in 2010 to 681 million (642–736) in 2023, and a
25·8% (22·6–28·7) reduction in age-standardised DALY rates. During the COVID-19 pandemic, DALYs due to CMNN
diseases rose but returned to pre-pandemic levels by 2023. From 2010 to 2023, decreases in age-standardised rates for
CMNN diseases were led by rate decreases of 49·1% (32·7–61·0) for diarrhoeal diseases, 42·9% (38·0–48·0) for HIV/
AIDS, and 42·2% (23·6–56·6) for tuberculosis. Neonatal disorders and lower respiratory infections remained the
leading level 3 CMNN causes globally in 2023, although both showed notable rate decreases from 2010, declining
by 16·5% (10·6–22·0) and 24·8% (7·4–36·7), respectively. Injury-related age-standardised DALY rates decreased
by 15·6% (10·7–19·8) over the same period. Differences in burden due to NCDs, CMNN diseases, and injuries
persisted across age, sex, time, and location. Based on our risk analysis, nearly 50% (1·27 billion [1·18–1·38]) of the
roughly 2·80 billion total global DALYs in 2023 were attributable to the 88 risk factors analysed in GBD. Globally, the
five level 3 risk factors contributing the highest proportion of risk-attributable DALYs were high systolic blood
pressure (SBP), particulate matter pollution, high fasting plasma glucose (FPG), smoking, and low birthweight and
short gestation—with high SBP accounting for 8·4% (6·9–10·0) of total DALYs. Of the three overarching level 1 GBD
risk factor categories—behavioural, metabolic, and environmental and occupational—risk-attributable DALYs rose
between 2010 and 2023 only for metabolic risks, increasing by 30·7% (24·8–37·3); however, age-standardised DALY rates attributable to metabolic risks decreased by 6·7% (2·0–11·0) over the same period. For all but three of the
25 leading level 3 risk factors, age-standardised rates dropped between 2010 and 2023—eg, declining by 54·4%
(38·7–65·3) for unsafe sanitation, 50·5% (33·3–63·1) for unsafe water source, and 45·2% (25·6–72·0) for no access
to handwashing facility, and by 44·9% (37·3–53·5) for child growth failure. The three leading level 3 risk factors for
which age-standardised attributable DALY rates rose were high BMI (10·5% [0·1 to 20·9]), drug use (8·4% [2·6 to
15·3]), and high FPG (6·2% [–2·7 to 15·6]; non-significant).
INTERPRETATION: Our findings underscore the complex and dynamic nature of global health challenges. Since 2010,
there have been large decreases in burden due to CMNN diseases and many environmental and behavioural risk
factors, juxtaposed with sizeable increases in DALYs attributable to metabolic risk factors and NCDs in growing and
ageing populations. This long-observed consequence of the global epidemiological transition was only temporarily
interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. The substantially decreasing CMNN disease burden, despite the 2008 global
financial crisis and pandemic-related disruptions, is one of the greatest collective public health successes known.
However, these achievements are at risk of being reversed due to major cuts to development assistance for health
globally, the effects of which will hit low-income countries with high burden the hardest. Without sustained
investment in evidence-based interventions and policies, progress could stall or reverse, leading to widespread human
costs and geopolitical instability. Moreover, the rising NCD burden necessitates intensified efforts to mitigate exposure
to leading risk factors—eg, air pollution, smoking, and metabolic risks, such as high SBP, BMI, and FPG—including
policies that promote food security, healthier diets, physical activity, and equitable and expanded access to potential
treatments, such as GLP-1 receptor agonists. Decisive, coordinated action is needed to address long-standing yet
growing health challenges, including depressive and anxiety disorders. Yet this can be only part of the solution. Our
response to the NCD syndemic—the complex interaction of multiple health risks, social determinants, and systemic
challenges—will define the future landscape of global health. To ensure human wellbeing, economic stability, and
social equity, global action to sustain and advance health gains must prioritise reducing disparities by addressing
socioeconomic and demographic determinants, ensuring equitable health-care access, tackling malnutrition,
strengthening health systems, and improving vaccination coverage. We live in times of great opportunity.
FUNDING: Gates Foundation and Bloomberg Philanthropies. |
| Web: |
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41092926/ |
|