The Malta Independent on Sunday

Malta the world’s 14th healthiest country to live in

- David Lindsay

We may complain an awful lot about pollution and our excessivel­y overweight population but, according to the respected medical journal The Lancet, Malta is the world’s 14th healthiest place in the entire world to live.

In an extensive study published this week, The Lancet analysed living conditions in no less than 188 counties using the United Nation’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) as guideposts to measure the quality of life in 33 areas such as poverty, clean water, education, disease, violence, road injuries, pollution and mortality rates.

The new study, which was funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, also placed Malta as the eighth-healthiest place to live in the European Union.

In terms of having achieved the 17 UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, Malta came in with a rank of 80, compared with the world’s highest ranking of 85 – shared jointly by Iceland, Singapore and Sweden. The SDGs are a successor to the Millennium Developmen­t Goals, a UN initiative that from 2000 to 2015 lifted a billion

people out of extreme poverty, halved the mortality of children younger than five years old, and raised by about 60 per cent the number of births attended to by a skilled health worker.

Malta received its highest marks (with scores of 100) in areas where Third World countries score lowest, such as disaster, growth stunting, wasting (acute malnutriti­on), malaria, neglected tropical diseases, road injuries, water, sanitation, and war.

But Malta received particular­ly low ratings for more First World problems such as being overweight (36), HIV (54), alcohol (62), smoking (54), occupation­al risk burden (70), and average PM2.5 – particulat­e matter air pollution – (59).

In this week’s new analysis, possibly the most comprehens­ive ever, Iceland and Sweden share the top slot with Singapore.

Related figures published in Malta this week, through the Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (SILC) survey, showed that during 2015, Malta’s monetary at-risk-of-poverty rate stood at 16.3 per cent and the country’s at-risk-of-poverty or social exclusion rate stood at 22.4 per cent.

The at-risk-of-poverty rate among Maltese aged below 18 years of age stood at 23.4 per cent, and for those 65 years of age and older the rate stood at 21 per cent. Those living in single parent households were found to be more susceptibl­e to being at-risk-of-poverty with a rate of 45.3 per cent.

The at-risk-of-poverty rate was found to decrease with increasing household work intensity, with 69.1 per cent of those living in households with very low work intensity were at-risk-of-poverty compared with only 1.9 per cent for those living in households with very high work intensity.

The severe material deprivatio­n rate stood at 8.1 per cent. More than 40 per cent were living in households which claimed that not all the household members could afford to pay for a one-week annual holiday away from home. In addition, 21.1 per cent said that

 ??  ?? they could not afford to face unexpected financial expenses, while 13.9 per cent said that they could not afford to keep their home adequately warm in winter.
they could not afford to face unexpected financial expenses, while 13.9 per cent said that they could not afford to keep their home adequately warm in winter.

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