4.8 Article

Are China's oldest-old living longer with less disability? A longitudinal modeling analysis of birth cohorts born 10years apart

Journal

BMC MEDICINE
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12916-019-1259-z

Keywords

Aging; Disability; Mortality; Birth cohort; Oldest-old; Life expectancy; China

Funding

  1. U.S. National Institutes on Aging [R01AG023627]
  2. China National Natural Science Foundation [71233001, 71110107025]
  3. China Social Science Foundation
  4. UNFPA
  5. National Institute on Aging [K07AG043587]
  6. James Hudson Brown-Alexander B. Coxe Fellowship from Yale School of Medicine [U01AG022376]
  7. David E. Bell fellowship at the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies
  8. Futures Scheme from the Australian National University

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BackgroundChina has transitioned from being one of the fastest-growing populations to among the most rapidly aging countries worldwide. In particular, the population of oldest-old individuals, those aged 80+, is projected to quadruple by 2050. The oldest-old represent a uniquely important groupthey have high demand for personal assistance and the highest healthcare costs of any age group. Understanding trends in disability and longevity among the oldest-oldthat is, whether successive generations are living longer and with less disabilityis of great importance for policy and planning purposes.MethodsWe utilized data from successive birth cohorts (n=20,520) of the Chinese oldest-old born 10years apart (the earlier cohort was interviewed in 1998 and the later cohort in 2008). Disability was defined as needing personal assistance in performing one or more of five essential activities (bathing, transferring, dressing, eating, and toileting) or being incontinent. Participants were followed for age-specific disability transitions and mortality (in 2000 and 2002 for the earlier cohort and 2011 and 2014 for the later cohort), which were then used to generate microsimulation-based multistate life tables to estimate partial life expectancy (LE) and disability-free LE (DFLE), stratified by sex and age groups (octogenarians, nonagenarians, and centenarians). We additionally explored sociodemographic heterogeneity in LE and DFLE by urban/rural residence and educational attainment.ResultsMore recently born Chinese octogenarians (born 1919-1928) had a longer partial LE between ages 80 and 89 than octogenarians born 1909-1918, and octogenarian women experienced an increase in partial DFLE of 0.32years (P=0.004) across the two birth cohorts. Although no increases in partial LE were observed among nonagenarians or centenarians, partial DFLE increased across birth cohorts, with a gain of 0.41years (P<0.001) among nonagenarians and 0.07 years (P=0.050) among centenarians. Subgroup analyses revealed that gains in partial LE and DFLE primarily occurred among the urban resident population.ConclusionsSuccessive generations of China's oldest-old are living with less disability as a whole, and LE is expanding among octogenarians. However, we found a widening urban-rural disparity in longevity and disability, highlighting the need to improve policies to alleviate health inequality throughout the population.

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