Halving premature death and improving quality of life at all ages: cross-country analyses of past trends and future directions

Ole F Norheim, Angela Y Chang, Sarah Bolongaita, Mariana Barraza-Lloréns, Ayodamope Fawole, Lia Tadesse Gebremedhin, Eduardo González-Pier, Prabhat Jha, Emily K Johnson, Omar Karlsson, Mizan Kiros, Sarah Lewington, Wenhui Mao, Osondu Ogbuoji, Muhammad Pate, Jennifer L Sargent, Xuyang Tang, David Watkins, Gavin Yamey, Dean T Jamison, Richard Peto
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Abstract

Background

Although death in old age is unavoidable, premature death—defined here as death before age 70 years—is not. To assess whether halving premature mortality by 2050 is feasible, we examined the large variation in premature death rates before age 70 years and trends over the past 50 years (1970–2019), covering ten world regions and the 30 most-populous nations. This analysis was undertaken in conjunction with the third report of The Lancet Commission on Investing in Health: Global Health 2050: the path to halving premature death by mid-century.

Methods

In this cross-country analysis of past mortality trends and future directions, all analyses on the probability of premature death (PPD) were conducted using life tables from the UN World Population Prospects 2024. For each sex, country, and year, probability of death was calculated from these life tables with 1-year age-specific mortality rates.

Findings

Globally, PPD decreased from 56% in 1970 to 31% in 2019, although some countries saw reversals because of conflict, social instability, or HIV and AIDS. Child mortality has decreased faster than adult mortality. Among all countries, 34 halved their PPD over three decades between 1970 and 2019. Among the 30 most-populous countries, seven countries, with varying levels of baseline PPD and income, halved their PPD in the past half century. Seven of the most-populous countries had average annual rates of improvement in the period 2010–19 that, if sustained, could lead to a halving of PPD by 2050, including Korea (3·9%), Bangladesh (2·8%), Russia (2·7%), Ethiopia (2·4%), Iran (2·4%), South Africa (2·4%), and Türkiye (2·3%).

Interpretation

Halving premature death by 2050 is feasible, although substantial investments in child and adult health are needed to sustain or accelerate the rate of improvement for high-performing and medium-performing countries. Particular attention must be paid to countries with very low or a worsening rate of improvement in PPD. By reducing premature mortality, more people will live longer and more healthy lives. However, as people live longer, the absolute number of years lived with chronic disease will increase and investments in services reducing chronic disease morbidity are needed.

Funding

The Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and a Norwegian Research Council Centre of Excellence grant.
将所有年龄段的过早死亡人数减半并提高生活质量:对过去趋势和未来方向的跨国分析
背景虽然老年死亡不可避免,但过早死亡(此处定义为 70 岁之前的死亡)却并非如此。为了评估到 2050 年将过早死亡率减半是否可行,我们研究了 70 岁前过早死亡率的巨大差异以及过去 50 年(1970-2019 年)的趋势,涵盖了世界 10 个地区和 30 个人口最多的国家。这项分析是结合柳叶刀健康投资委员会的第三份报告进行的:在这项关于过去死亡率趋势和未来走向的跨国分析中,所有关于过早死亡概率(PPD)的分析都是使用联合国《2024 年世界人口展望》中的生命表进行的。对于每个性别、国家和年份,死亡概率都是根据这些生命表和 1 年特定年龄死亡率计算得出的。研究结果从全球来看,早亡概率从 1970 年的 56% 降至 2019 年的 31%,但一些国家由于冲突、社会不稳定或艾滋病毒和艾滋病的影响,早亡概率出现了逆转。儿童死亡率的下降速度快于成人死亡率。在所有国家中,有34个国家在1970年至2019年的30年间将儿童死亡率降低了一半。在人口最多的 30 个国家中,有 7 个国家在过去半个世纪中将 PPD 减少了一半,这些国家的 PPD 基线和收入水平各不相同。在人口最多的国家中,有 7 个国家在 2010-19 年期间的年均改善率如果保持不变,到 2050 年可将 PPD 减少一半,这些国家包括韩国(3-9%)、孟加拉国(2-8%)、俄罗斯(2-7%)、埃塞俄比亚(2-4%)、伊朗(2-4%)、南非(2-4%)和土耳其(2-3%)。解释到 2050 年减少过早死亡是可行的,尽管需要对儿童和成人健康进行大量投资,以保持或加快高绩效和中等绩效国家的改善速度。必须特别关注 PPD 改善率非常低或正在恶化的国家。通过降低过早死亡率,更多的人将活得更长、更健康。挪威发展合作署、比尔-盖茨基金会和挪威研究理事会卓越中心的资助。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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