Global life expectancy up 6.2 years since 1990: Study
The Lancet study says the gains would have been far more significant had it not been for the arrival of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020.
New Delhi: On average, people across the world are living more than six years longer in 2021 than what they did in 1990, according to a new study published in The Lancet on Thursday, which also showed that life expectancy in India has increased by nearly eight years in the past three decades.
This progress, the report said, is attributed to reductions in death from leading killers such as diarrhoea, lower respiratory infections, stroke, and ischemic heart disease (heart attacks caused by narrowed arteries). The paper, however, added the gains would have been far more significant had it not been for the arrival of the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020, which heavily derailed the progress.
In the South Asia region, of which India is a part, Bhutan saw the biggest gains in life expectancy (13.6 years), followed by Bangladesh (13.3), Nepal (10.4), and Pakistan (2.5 years).
Despite the challenges presented by the pandemic, researchers said that the super region of Southeast Asia, East Asia, and Oceania had the largest net gain in life expectancy between 1990 and 2021 (8.3 years), largely due to reductions in deaths caused by chronic respiratory diseases, stroke, lower respiratory infections, and cancer.
The region’s management of the pandemic helped preserve these gains, it added. South Asia had the second-largest net increase in life expectancy among super-regions between 1990 and 2021 (7.8 years), primarily thanks to steep declines in deaths from diarrhoeal diseases.
“Our study presents a nuanced picture of the world’s health,” said Dr Liane Ong, co-first author of the study and a lead research scientist at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), in a statement. “On one hand, we see countries’ monumental achievements in preventing deaths from diarrhoea and stroke. At the same time, we see how much the Covid-19 pandemic has set us back.”
For the first time in decades, researchers noted that a major reshuffle took place in the leading causes of deaths across the world – with the pandemic altering the rankings heavily.
Covid-19 displaced a long-dominant killer – stroke – to become the second-leading cause of death globally. The label “Other pandemic-related death” took the fifth spot among the leading causes of deaths in 2021.
The research presents updated estimates from the Global Burden of Disease Study (GBD) 2021.
The authors found that the super-regions where the Covid-19 pandemic hit hardest were Latin America and the Caribbean and sub-Saharan Africa, which lost the most years of life expectancy due to Covid-19 in 2021. While documenting the enormous loss of life caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, the researchers also pinpointed the reasons behind the improvements in life expectancy in every super[1]region. Looking across different causes of death, the study reveals sharp drops in deaths from enteric diseases – a class of diseases that includes diarrhea and typhoid. These improvements increased life expectancy worldwide by 1.1 years between 1990 and 2021.
Reductions in deaths from lower respiratory infections added 0.9 years to global life expectancy during this period. Progress in preventing deaths from other causes also drove up life expectancy around the world, including stroke, neonatal disorders, ischemic heart disease, and cancer. For each disease, reductions in deaths were most pronounced between 1990 and 2019.
At the regional level, Eastern sub-Saharan Africa experienced the largest increase in life expectancy, which jumped by 10.7 years between 1990 and 2021. Control of diarrheal diseases was the leading force behind improvements in this region. East Asia had the second-largest gain in life expectancy; the region’s success in slashing deaths from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease played a key role.
The GBD 2021 study measures mortality by cause of death and years of life lost at global, regional, national, and subnational levels. The analysis links specific causes of death to changes in life expectancy.
The study illuminates not only the diseases that have driven increases and decreases in life expectancy, but also looks at how patterns of disease have shifted across locations over time, presenting, as the authors write, an “opportunity to deepen our understanding of mortality-reduction strategies…[which] might reveal areas where successful public health interventions have been implemented.”
GBD 2021 highlights places that have made huge strides in preventing deaths from major diseases and injuries. It also emphasises how some of the most burdensome diseases are now concentrated in certain locations – underscoring opportunities for targeted intervention which may reduce these deaths even further. For example, in 2021, deaths from enteric diseases (foodborne infections) were largely concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. For another disease, malaria, the researchers found that 90% of deaths occurred in an area inhabited by just 12% of the world’s population in a stretch of land ranging from Western sub-Saharan Africa through Central Africa to Mozambique.
“We already know how to save children from dying from enteric infections including diarrheal diseases, and progress in fighting this disease has been tremendous,” said professor Mohsen Naghavi, the study’s co-first author and the director of subnational burden of disease estimation, IHME, in a statement. “Now, we need to focus on preventing and treating these diseases, strengthening and expanding immunization programs, and developing brand-new vaccines against E. coli, norovirus, and Shigella.”
In addition to providing new insights on Covid-19, the study reveals growing threats from non-communicable diseases, such as diabetes and kidney diseases, which are increasing in every country.
The researchers also point to uneven progress against conditions such as ischemic heart disease, stroke, and cancer. High-income countries have driven down deaths from many types of non-communicable diseases, but many low-income countries have not.
“The global community must ensure that the lifesaving tools that have cut deaths from ischemic heart disease, stroke, and other non-communicable diseases in most high-income countries are available to people in all countries, even where resources are limited,” said Eve Wool, senior author of the study and a senior research manager, IHME.