The Independent on Saturday

Chance of a long life seems to be getting shorter

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NEW YORK: People’s chances of living longer have been increasing dramatical­ly for decades. But that seems to have slowed recently, a new worldwide study has found.

The sharpest decline has come in countries that already had the shortest life expectancy, according to researcher­s from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore.

They said the slowdown in life expectancy gains did not mean humans had simply reached their maximum biological life span. Rather, the researcher­s argued that their findings could mean that recent medical advances have not sustained historic increases in average life expectancy.

“This is not about us hitting the ceiling,” researcher David Bishai said. “The slowdown has been sharpest in countries that have the most life expectancy to gain.”

Bishai is a professor in the school’s Department of Population, Family and Reproducti­ve Health. “New health technology has been essential to making strides in life expectancy, but our predecesso­rs in the 1950s were making faster progress with the basics of soap, sanitation and public health.”

In the 1950s, the study found, life expectancy worldwide increased, on average, by 9.7 years in a decade. Since 2000, however, the increase in a decade has been just 1.9 years.

The findings came from life expectancy data from 139 countries, spanning 1950 to 2010.

The investigat­ors found that countries with the longest life expectancy were approachin­g the maximum life span of 71 to 83. In those countries, the average life expectancy gain of five years in the 1950s was cut roughly in half, to 2.4 years, in the first decade of the 2000s.

The downward trend in life expectancy was even greater in countries with the shortest lifespans. There, sizeable gains became sharp declines.

The HIV/Aids pandemic can be blamed for some of the decline, but the researcher­s said it’s not the whole story.

“The slowdown in life expectancy gains started before Aids hit in the 1980s and 90s and occurred even in regions that did not have big problems with this disease,” Bishai said.

Also, the methods used to calculate life expectancy have changed since the 1950s, but the slowdown in gains continued. According to the researcher­s, that means there’s probably another factor at work.

They argued that government failures may play a role and global public health efforts must be improved. Providing health technologi­es isn’t enough, they said.

“Nowadays, the countries with persistent­ly low life expectancy generally are fragile states – some are not even trying to increase their life expectancy,” Bishai said. “We need to promote political will and social consensus for public health measures in the countries that need it most.”

The findings were published recently in the journal BMC Public Health. – The New York Times

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