Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/181558
Título: Changing life expectancy in European countries 1990–2021
Autor: Steel, Nicholas
Bauer-Staeb, Clarissa Maria Mercedes
Ford, John A.
Abbafati, Cristiana
Abdalla, Mohammed Altigani
Abdelkader, Atef
Abdi, Parsa
Abeldaño Zuñiga, Roberto Ariel
Abiodun, Olugbenga Olusola
Abolhassani, Hassan
Abu-Gharbieh, Eman
Abukhadijah, Hana J.
Abu-Zaid, Ahmed
Addo, Isaac Yeboah
Addolorato, Giovanni
Adekanmbi, Victor
Adetunji, Juliana Bunmi
Adeyeoluwa, Temitayo Esther
Agardh, Emilie E.
Agyemang-Duah, Williams
Ahmad, Danish
Ahmed, Syed Anees
Ahmed, Syed Anees
Ahmed, Syed Anees
Akinosoglou, Karolina
Akkaif, Mohammed Ahmed
Al Awaidy, Salah
Al Hasan, Syed Mahfuz
Al Zaabi, Omar Ali Mohammed
Aldridge, Robert W.
Algammal, Abdelazeem M.
Al-Gheethi, Adel Ali Saeed
Ali, Abid
Ali, Mohammed Usman
Ali, Syed Shujait
Ali, Waad
Alicandro, Gianfranco
Alif, Sheikh Mohammad
Al-Jumaily, Adel
Allebeck, Peter
Alrawashdeh, Ahmad
Al-Rifai, Rami H.
Alsabri, Mohammed A.
Aluh, Deborah
Conde, João
Farinha, Carla Sofia e.Sá
Ferreira, Nuno
Ortiz, Alberto
Ribeiro, Ana Isabel
Silva, João Pedro
Palavras-chave: Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
Data: Mar-2025
Resumo: Background: Decades of steady improvements in life expectancy in Europe slowed down from around 2011, well before the COVID-19 pandemic, for reasons which remain disputed. We aimed to assess how changes in risk factors and cause-specific death rates in different European countries related to changes in life expectancy in those countries before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: We used data and methods from the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study 2021 to compare changes in life expectancy at birth, causes of death, and population exposure to risk factors in 16 European Economic Area countries (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, and Sweden) and the four UK nations (England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales) for three time periods: 1990–2011, 2011–19, and 2019–21. Changes in life expectancy and causes of death were estimated with an established life expectancy cause-specific decomposition method, and compared with summary exposure values of risk factors for the major causes of death influencing life expectancy. Findings: All countries showed mean annual improvements in life expectancy in both 1990–2011 (overall mean 0·23 years [95% uncertainty interval [UI] 0·23 to 0·24]) and 2011–19 (overall mean 0·15 years [0·13 to 0·16]). The rate of improvement was lower in 2011–19 than in 1990–2011 in all countries except for Norway, where the mean annual increase in life expectancy rose from 0·21 years (95% UI 0·20 to 0·22) in 1990–2011 to 0·23 years (0·21 to 0·26) in 2011–19 (difference of 0·03 years). In other countries, the difference in mean annual improvement between these periods ranged from –0·01 years in Iceland (0·19 years [95% UI 0·16 to 0·21] vs 0·18 years [0·09 to 0·26]), to –0·18 years in England (0·25 years [0·24 to 0·25] vs 0·07 years [0·06 to 0·08]). In 2019–21, there was an overall decrease in mean annual life expectancy across all countries (overall mean –0·18 years [95% UI –0·22 to –0·13]), with all countries having an absolute fall in life expectancy except for Ireland, Iceland, Sweden, Norway, and Denmark, which showed marginal improvement in life expectancy, and Belgium, which showed no change in life expectancy. Across countries, the causes of death responsible for the largest improvements in life expectancy from 1990 to 2011 were cardiovascular diseases and neoplasms. Deaths from cardiovascular diseases were the primary driver of reductions in life expectancy improvements during 2011–19, and deaths from respiratory infections and other COVID-19 pandemic-related outcomes were responsible for the decreases in life expectancy during 2019–21. Deaths from cardiovascular diseases and neoplasms in 2019 were attributable to high systolic blood pressure, dietary risks, tobacco smoke, high LDL cholesterol, high BMI, occupational risks, high alcohol use, and other risks including low physical activity. Exposure to these major risk factors differed by country, with trends of increasing exposure to high BMI and decreasing exposure to tobacco smoke observed in all countries during 1990–2021. Interpretation: The countries that best maintained improvements in life expectancy after 2011 (Norway, Iceland, Belgium, Denmark, and Sweden) did so through better maintenance of reductions in mortality from cardiovascular diseases and neoplasms, underpinned by decreased exposures to major risks, possibly mitigated by government policies. The continued improvements in life expectancy in five countries during 2019–21 indicate that these countries were better prepared to withstand the COVID-19 pandemic. By contrast, countries with the greatest slowdown in life expectancy improvements after 2011 went on to have some of the largest decreases in life expectancy in 2019–21. These findings suggest that government policies that improve population health also build resilience to future shocks. Such policies include reducing population exposure to major upstream risks for cardiovascular diseases and neoplasms, such as harmful diets and low physical activity, tackling the commercial determinants of poor health, and ensuring access to affordable health services. Funding: Gates Foundation.
Descrição: Funding Information: The research reported in this publication was funded by the Gates Foundation. Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/181558
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S2468-2667(25)00009-X
ISSN: 2468-2667
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