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Most
US presidents live beyond average life
expectancy
December 8, 2011--Contrary to claims that
U.S. presidents age at twice the normal
rate, a new study finds that most U.S.
presidents live longer than expected for men
of their same age and era.
The research letter, by noted University of
Illinois at Chicago demographer S. Jay
Olshansky, is published in the Dec. 7 issue
of JAMA, the Journal of the
American Medical Association.
Olshansky became interested in the subject
when, in the summer of 2011, President Obama
celebrated his 50th birthday and a flurry of
news reports focused on his graying hair,
pronounced wrinkles, and rapidly aging
appearance.
"In the world of biology we know that
you can't actually measure the aging of
an individual," says Olshansky,
professor of epidemiology at the UIC
School of Public Health. "There isn't
any single test to actually measure how
long you've aged from point A to point
B, nor is it possible to predict
specifically how long an individual will
live."
Using the assumption that presidents age at
twice the normal rate, Olshansky calculated
how long U.S. presidents would have been
expected to live based on their age and the
year they were inaugurated -- and compared
it to how long they actually lived.
Aging at twice the normal rate was estimated
by removing two days of life for every day
in office (for example, a 4-year term led to
a reduction in estimated remaining lifespan
of 8 years).
Olshansky found that 23 of the 34 U.S.
presidents who died from natural causes
lived longer, and in many instances
significantly longer, than predicted. Their
average age at inauguration was 55.1 years.
Four presidents who were assassinated were
removed from the analysis.
Conventional wisdom suggests that the
longevity of U.S. presidents is shortened
due to the stresses of the office, but the
average lifespan of the first eight
presidents was 79.8 years -- during a time
when life expectancy at birth for men was
less than 40.
"This is about how long females born in the
U.S. today live," Olshansky said.
The study also found that living
ex-presidents have either already exceeded
their predicted longevity at the time of
their inauguration, or are likely to do so.
"We know that socioeconomic status has an
extremely powerful effect on longevity now,"
Olshansky said, "and it was likely to have
been a factor in the past." All but 10 U.S.
presidents were college educated; all were
wealthy; and all had access to health care.
"We don't die from gray hair and wrinkled
skin," said Olshansky. "What we're seeing in
President Obama is really not inconsistent
with what we see for any other man his age
in the U.S. or elsewhere."