Burton Mail

Drop in average healthy life expectancy for newborns

NEW FIGURES FOR BABIES BORN BETWEEN 2020-22 BLAMES THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC

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THE number of years of good health a newborn baby in England can expect to enjoy has fallen, figures suggest. Average healthy life expectancy for a child born between 2020 and 2022 is estimated to be 62.4 years for males and 62.7 for females, down from 63.3 and 63.7 years respective­ly for births in 201719.

The drop means the healthy life expectancy of a boy born in 202022 is 9.3 months lower than it was in 2011-13 when the current estimates began, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) which published the data. Females have seen an even bigger fall since 2011-13, of 14.0 months. “Because minimal change was seen up to 2017 to 2019, it is likely the coronaviru­s pandemic contribute­d to the decrease,” the ONS said.

Figures published in January for overall life expectancy showed a similar picture, with a boy born in the UK between 2020 and 2022 expected to live until they were 78.6 years old, down from 79.3 years in 2017-19, while a girl born in 2020-22 was expected to live for 82.6 years, down from 83.0 years.

The pandemic led to increased mortality in 2020 and 2021, which affected the estimates of a newborn baby’s total life expectancy, as well as the number of years they are likely to enjoy good health.

But this does not mean a baby born in this period will necessaril­y have a shorter life, or spend less time in good health.

This is because life expectancy estimates would go back up if mortality rates improve through the years, the ONS added.

There are sharp regional variations in healthy life expectancy, with the figures for males born in 2020-22 ranging from 64.6 years in south-east England to 57.6 in north-east England – a gap of seven years.

This is up from a gap of just under six years between the same two regions in 2017-19.

For females, the estimates for 2020-22 range from a high of 64.7 years for babies born in the South East to a low of 59.0 years for the North East – a difference of just over five-and-a-half years, compared with nearly seven years in 2017-19.

Dr Aideen Young, of the campaign group Centre for Ageing Better, said the figures showed there is a “shameful gulf in the experience­s of growing older in this country depending on where you live”.

She continued: “For older people desperatel­y struggling to make ends meet in later life, their experience and their outcomes are a world away from their wealthier peers.

“Of course, the Covid-19 pandemic has had a dramatic impact on the general health of our country and its population. But it doesn’t account for all the negative trends we are seeing here.

“Without drastic action, we will continue to have two ageing population­s in this country living parallel and incomparab­le lives.

“We need a Commission­er for Older People and Ageing for England to give voice to the many older people who are marginalis­ed and ignored, and ensure that the issues that affect them are considered in policy-making.”

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