4.6 Review

Trends in health expectancies: a systematic review of international evidence

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-045567

Keywords

health policy; organisation of health services; geriatric medicine

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Policy Research Programme through the NIHR Older People and Frailty Policy Research Unit [PR-PRU1217-21502]

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The study suggests that gains in healthy and disability-free life expectancy do not always match the overall increase in life expectancy in OECD high-income countries, potentially impacting the sustainability of health and care systems.
ObjectivesA clear understanding of whether increases in longevity are spent in good health is necessary to support ageing, health and care-related policy.DesignWe conducted a systematic review to update and summarise evidence on trends in health expectancies, in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) high-income countries.Data sourcesFour electronic databases (MEDLINE, 1946-19 September 2019; Embase 1980-2019week 38; Scopus 1966-22 September 2019, Health Management Information Consortium, 1979-September 2019), and the UK Office for National Statistics website (November 2019).Eligibility criteriaEnglish language studies published from 2016 that reported trends in healthy, active and/or disability-free life expectancy in an OECD high-income country.Data extraction and synthesisRecords were screened independently by two researchers. Study quality was assessed using published criteria designed to identify sources of bias in studies reporting trends, and evidence summarised by narrative synthesis.FindingsTwenty-eight publications from 11 countries were included, covering periods from 6 to 40 years, between 1970 and 2017. In most countries, gains in healthy and disability-free life expectancy do not match the growth in total life expectancy. Exceptions were demonstrated for women in Sweden, where there were greater gains in disability-free years than life expectancy. Gains in healthy and disability-free life expectancy were greater for men than women in most countries except the USA (age 85), Japan (birth), Korea (age 65) and Sweden (age 77).ConclusionAn expansion of disability in later life is evident in a number of high-income countries, with implications for the sustainability of health and care systems. The recent COVID-19 pandemic may also impact health expectancies in the longer term.

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