LIFE RISKS
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PROJECT SUMMARY
Chair on Longevity and healthy active life
Carol JAGGER, Chair Holder
Support by the AXA Research Fund
| TYPE OF SUPPORT | GRANTED AMOUNT | DURATION |
|---|---|---|
| Permanent Chairs | € 750,000 | Permanent |
Project Informations
Will we live longer and healthier?
Carol Jagger
Chair holder of the AXA-Newcastle Chair on Longevity and Healthy Active Life,
University of Newcastle, UK
Professor Carol Jagger is an internationally renowned expert on healthy life expectancy.
Her work crosses the interface between demography and epidemiology to project and analyse
future trends in ageing, a field of research where much remains to be done.
Carol Jagger has also helped shape the first European Health and Life Expectancy
Information System (EHLEIS) which has shown huge variations in disability-free life
expectancy at age 55 among European countries. This is of crucial importance for EU public
policy planners, but it will certainly be of equal interest in the current debate on raising the
retirement age.
As life expectancy rises in developed countries, the “oldest old” have become the fastest growing section of the population. But do those 85 years and older, with their high rates of age-related diseases and disability, live well in those extra years? “The picture is very unclear, says professor Carol Jagger, who holds the AXA Chair on Longevity and Healthy Active Life at
Newcastle University. We don’t have enough good data yet to answer this question, but we are working hard in Newcastle to obtain it.”
One of the difficulties researchers face is the lack of comparable surveys at different time points. “Trends in life expectancy are generally well known because mortality data has been routinely collected in most developed countries for a long time, says Carol Jagger. But health is a different matter. In the UK most of our regular surveys do not include older people living in long-term care facilities. Inclusion of this group is important to get a true picture of population health but it is particularly important when understanding trends in the health and needs of the oldest old.”
So far, the statistics available in the world have shown that trends in health are variable worldwide. “From the 1990’s through the mid-2000s, the United States suggested that the extra years of life experienced were free of disability. However, more recent data indicate that it may no longer be true at all older ages, as obesity has started to affect the younger old population there.” The situation is different again in the UK, which has been experiencing an expansion of disability. “Figures from the Office for National Statistics have shown that healthy life expectancy has not been keeping pace with life expectancy, and therefore extra years of life are not healthy ones in general”, points out Carol Jagger.
Current studies should bring clearer results. For the past five years, Carol Jagger has been one of the leaders of the Medical Research Council “Newcastle 85 + Study”, a major project to assess, in great detail, the spectrum of health and ageing in a cohort of more than one thousand 85 year olds in the region. “We found that none of our participants was free of disease, a common measure of successful ageing. Yet, 20 % of them were independent in 17 activities of daily living and a number were functioning extremely well, with healthy minds and very active lives.” This questions definitions of successful
ageing especially for the oldest old. “Our definitions should include the views of older people themselves, says Carol Jagger. Many have diseasse and some are frail, but they may consider that they are healthy for their age and have high levels of well-being”.
Mental health is another key issue, as the prevalence of dementia and cognitive impairment is strongly agerelated. In this field, The Medical Research Council “Cognitive Function and Ageing Study”, in which Carol Jagger is involved, will soon make comparisons possible over repeat studies 20 years apart. Among the questions being addressed is “Will the higher level of education of the new 65s and over result in better cogni tive function and slower declines? The new study will also be used to update estimates of the future burden of disability through changing patterns of disease, which formed part of MAP 2030 (“Modelling Ageing Population to 2030”), a major multidisciplinary effort to investigate the needs and resources of older people in the UK.
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