Reuters Health Information: Global population living six years longer than in 1990: study
Global population living six years longer than in 1990: study
Last Updated: 2014-12-18
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - Global life expectancy has risen by more
than six years since 1990 thanks to falling death rates from
cancer and heart disease in rich countries and better survival
in poor countries from diarrhea, tuberculosis and malaria.
In an analysis from the 2013 Global Burden of Disease (GBD)
study, health researchers said, however, that while life
expectancy is rising almost everywhere in the world, one notable
exception is southern sub-Saharan Africa, where deaths from
HIV/AIDS have erased some five years of life expectancy since
1990.
"The progress we are seeing against a variety of illnesses
and injuries is good -- even remarkable -- but we can and must
do even better," said Christopher Murray, a professor of global
health at the University of Washington in the United States, who
led the study, published online December 17 in The Lancet.
Murray said a huge increase in collective action and funding
given to potentially deadly infectious diseases such as
diarrhea, measles, tuberculosis, HIV and malaria has had a real
impact, reducing death rates and extending life expectancy.
But he said some major chronic diseases have been neglected
and are rising in importance as threats to life, particularly
drug disorders, liver cirrhosis, diabetes and kidney disease.
The GBD 2013 gives the most comprehensive and up-to-date
estimates of the number of yearly deaths from 240 different
causes in 188 countries over 23 years -- from 1990 to 2013.
Murray's team's latest analysis found some poorer countries
have made exceptional gains in life expectancy over that time
period, with people in Nepal, Rwanda, Ethiopia, Niger, Maldives,
East Timor and Iran now living on average 12 years longer.
Yet despite dramatic drops in child deaths over the last 23
years, malaria, diarrhea and respiratory infections such as
pneumonia are still in the top five global causes of death in
children under five, killing almost two million children between
the ages of one month and 59 months every year.
Another mixed success is that, while worldwide deaths from
HIV/AIDS have fallen every year since their peak in 2005,
HIV/AIDS is still the greatest cause of premature death in 20
out of 48 countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/16vEuL0
Lancet 2014.
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