School of Demography, College of Arts and Social Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
Department of Non-Communicable Disease Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Int J Epidemiol. 2024 Aug 14;53(5). doi: 10.1093/ije/dyae128.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, stagnating life expectancy trends were reported in some high-income countries (HICs). Despite previous evidence from country-specific studies, there is a lack of comparative research that provides a broader perspective and challenges existing assumptions. This study aims to examine longevity trends and patterns in six English-speaking countries (Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, United Kingdom, United States) by combining period and cohort perspectives and to compare them with other HICs.
Using data from the Human Mortality and World Health Organization Mortality Databases, we estimated partial life expectancy, lifespan inequality and cohort survival differences for 1970-2021, as well as the contribution of causes of death to the gap in life expectancy between English-speaking countries and the average for other HICs in 2017-19.
In the pre-pandemic period, the increase in life expectancy slowed in all English-speaking countries, except Ireland, mainly due to stagnating or rising mortality at young-middle ages. Relative to other HICs, those born in Anglophone countries since the 1970s experienced relative survival disadvantage, largely attributable to injuries (mainly suicides) and substance-related mortality (mainly poisonings). In contrast, older cohorts enjoyed advantages for females in Australia and Canada and for males in all English-speaking countries except the United States.
Although future gains in life expectancy in wealthy societies will increasingly depend on reducing mortality at older ages, adverse health trends at younger ages are a cause for concern. This emerging and avoidable threat to health equity in English-speaking countries should be the focus of further research and policy action.
在 COVID-19 大流行之前,一些高收入国家(HICs)的预期寿命增长趋势已经停滞。尽管之前有来自特定国家的研究证据,但缺乏提供更广泛视角和挑战现有假设的比较研究。本研究旨在通过结合时期和队列的视角,研究六个英语国家(澳大利亚、加拿大、爱尔兰、新西兰、英国、美国)的长寿趋势和模式,并将其与其他 HICs 进行比较。
使用来自人类死亡率和世界卫生组织死亡率数据库的数据,我们估计了 1970-2021 年的部分预期寿命、寿命不平等和队列生存差异,以及 2017-19 年导致英语国家与其他 HICs 之间预期寿命差距的死亡原因的贡献。
在大流行前时期,除爱尔兰外,所有英语国家的预期寿命增长都放缓,主要是由于中青年死亡率停滞或上升。与其他 HICs 相比,自 20 世纪 70 年代以来出生在英语国家的人相对生存处于劣势,这主要归因于伤害(主要是自杀)和与物质相关的死亡率(主要是中毒)。相比之下,在澳大利亚和加拿大,较年轻的队列对女性有优势,而在除美国以外的所有英语国家,较年长的队列对男性有优势。
尽管未来富裕社会的预期寿命增长将越来越依赖于降低老年死亡率,但年轻年龄的不良健康趋势令人担忧。这种在英语国家中出现且可避免的健康公平威胁应该成为进一步研究和政策行动的重点。