Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2011 Jul;73(2):254-63. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.05.027. Epub 2011 Jun 2.
In 1975, 50-year-old Americans could expect to live slightly longer than most of their Western European counterparts. By 2005, American life expectancy had fallen behind that of most Western European countries. We find that this growing longevity gap is primarily due to real declines in the health of near-elderly Americans, relative to their Western European peers. We use a microsimulation approach to project what US longevity would look like, if US health trends approximated those in Western Europe. The model implies that differences in health can explain most of the growing gap in remaining life expectancy. In addition, we quantify the public finance consequences of this deterioration in health. The model predicts that gradually moving American cohorts to the health status enjoyed by Western Europeans could save up to $1.1 trillion in discounted total health expenditures from 2004 to 2050.
1975 年,50 岁的美国人的预期寿命比大多数西欧人略长。到 2005 年,美国人的预期寿命落后于大多数西欧国家。我们发现,这种不断扩大的长寿差距主要是由于美国近老年人口的健康状况相对其西欧同龄人实际下降所致。我们使用微观模拟方法来预测,如果美国的健康趋势接近西欧的健康趋势,美国的长寿状况会如何。该模型表明,健康状况的差异可以解释剩余预期寿命不断扩大的大部分原因。此外,我们还量化了健康状况恶化对公共财政的影响。该模型预测,从 2004 年到 2050 年,逐渐将美国各年龄段的人群的健康状况提升至西欧人所享有的水平,可能会节省高达 1.1 万亿美元的贴现总健康支出。