cellio: (hubble-swirl)
[personal profile] cellio
I saw a news story today about how US life expectancy is at an all-time high. The article doesn't give enough data to be really useful (it's just the popular press, after all), but I found on reading it that I'm not really interested in life-expectancy figures any more. I'm much more interested in the much-harder-to-compute health expectancy.

In other words, at what age do the statistics say the average person will be last able to live independently with a functioning mind and body? (Yes, of course I recognize that this is hard to characterize precisely.) I don't care if life expectancy goes up to 120 if the last 20 years of it are spent lying in a bed no longer able to recognize anyone. That's where we face our challenges today. Keeping people alive is easy; keeping lives worth living all the way to the end is harder.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-02-28 11:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nancylebov.livejournal.com
There was an NPR piece which said that the diseases of ageing are apt to hit about 10 years later than they used to, and (a vaguer estimate) if we wanted to start Social Security at the age at which a lot of people pretty much couldn't work any more, it should begin at 73.

Keeping people's lives worth living all the way to the end is probably too hard a goal, depending on what you mean by worth living. Maintaining fairly good health for everyone till a year or two before death would be a hard enough goal.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-02-28 11:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sue-n-julia.livejournal.com
Of course, that depends on the type of work people are doing. If you have people who are doing manual labor all their lives, then they still need to be able to retire at 65. Manual labor takes quite a toll on joints, bones, and muscle.

If you are working in an office or in academia, then, sure, you can work until you drop over. You don't have to be able to meet severe physical demands.

As far as quality of life is concerned, I guess we each have to decide where to draw the line. As far as I'm concerned, that hasn't really changed.

S

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