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We spend
more time sick now than a Decade ago
Newswise, December 14, 2010 — Increased life
expectancy in the United States has not been
accompanied by more years of perfect health,
reveals new research published in the
December issue of the Journal of
Gerontology.
New research from Eileen Crimmins, AARP
Chair in Gerontology at the University of
Southern California, and Hiram
Beltrán-Sánchez, a postdoctoral fellow at
the Andrus Gerontology Center at USC, shows
that average “morbidity,” or, the period of
life spend with serious disease or loss of
functional mobility, has actually increased
in the last few decades.
Indeed, a
20-year-old today can expect to live one
less healthy year over his or her lifespan
than a 20-year-old a decade ago, even though
life expectancy has grown.
From 1970 to
2005, the probability of a 65-year-old
surviving to age 85 doubled, from about a 20
percent chance to a 40 percent chance.
Many researchers
presumed that the same forces allowing
people to live longer, including better
health behaviors and medical advances, would
also delay the onset of disease and allow
people to spend fewer years of their lives
with debilitating illness.
“We have always
assumed that each generation will be
healthier and longer lived than the prior
one,” Crimmins explained. “However, the
compression of morbidity may be as illusory
as immortality.”
While people
might be expected to live more years with
disease simply as a function of living
longer in general, the researchers show that
the average number of healthy years has
decreased since 1998. We spend fewer years
of our lives without disease, even though we
live longer.
A male
20-year-old in 1998 could expect to live
another 45 years without at least one of the
leading causes of death: cardiovascular
disease, cancer or diabetes. That number
fell to 43.8 years in 2006, the loss of more
than a year. For young women, expected years
of life without serious disease fell from
49.2 years to 48 years over the last decade.
At the same time,
the number of people who report lack of
mobility has grown, starting with young
adults. Functional mobility was defined as
the ability to walk up ten steps, walk a
quarter mile, stand or sit for 2 hours, and
stand, bend or kneel without using special
equipment.
A male
20-year-old today can expect to spend 5.8
years over the rest of his life without
basic mobility, compared to 3.8 years a
decade ago — an additional two years unable
to walk up ten steps or sit for two hours. A
female 20-year-old can expect 9.8 years
without mobility, compared to 7.3 years a
decade ago.
“There is
substantial evidence that we have done
little to date to eliminate or delay disease
while we have prevented death from
diseases,” Crimmins explained. “At the same
time, there have been substantial increases
in the incidences of certain chronic
diseases, specifically, diabetes.”
From 1998 to
2006, the prevalence of cardiovascular
disease increased among older men, the
researchers found. Both older men and women
showed an increased prevalence of cancer.
Diabetes increased significantly among all
adult age groups over age 30.
The proportion of
the population with multiple diseases also
increased.
“The increasing
prevalence of disease may to some extent
reflect better diagnostics, but what it most
clearly reflects is increasing survival of
people with disease ,” Crimmins said. “The
cost of maintaining and providing care for
people with chronic conditions is an
important part of determining the economic
well-being of countries with established
social security and government-provided
health services.”
Crimmins and
Beltrán-Sánchez note that only delaying the
onset of disease through preventive care
will clearly lead to longer disease-free
lives.
“The growing
problem of lifelong obesity and increases in
hypertension and high cholesterol are a sign
that health may not be improving with each
generation,” Crimmins said. “We do not
appear to be moving to a world where we die
without experiencing significant periods of
disease, functioning loss, and disability.”
Crimmins and
Beltrán-Sánchez. “Mortality and Morbidity
Trends: Is There Compression of Morbidity?” Journal
of Gerontology: Social Sciences: 2010.