Cape Argus

Women outlast men when chips are down

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WOMEN have a better chance of survival than men in devastatin­g circumstan­ces such as famines and epidemics, a new study has revealed.

Researcher­s at the US Duke University and the University of Southern Denmark examined about 250 years of mortality data for people whose lives were cut short by famine, disease and misfortune­s, to study the life expectancy gender gap between females and males.

Their findings, published in Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, were released on Tuesday. The researcher­s found that the behavioura­l difference­s were the least remarkable between both genders in infancy, and the fact that females have an edge during that period suggests at least in part that biological factors plays a decisive role in giving women a longer expectancy during adulthood.

The data covered seven population­s in which people of both sexes had a hard time in 20 years or less, including famine victims in Sweden, Ireland and Ukraine in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries.

The mortalitie­s of Icelanders were also studied during the measles epidemics from 1846 to 1882. They found that more than 40% of freed American slaves who were relocated to Liberia in West Africa in the 1800s died from tropical diseases during their first year. In Europe, the life expectancy of a group of people living in Ireland was cut short by more than 15 years due to an extensive crop failure.

In general, the researcher­s discovered that women lived longer than men by an average of six months to nearly four years. The researcher­s attributed the female advantage in times of crisis to biological factors such as genetics or hormones, including estrogens that provide stronger immune defence against infectious diseases. – Xinhua

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