What is the relationship between longevity and health? Health expectancies were developed more than 30 years ago specifically to answer this question. It may therefore be the time to try to answer this question, though it is worth noting that the question implies a unidirectional relationship. Almost no one questions the positive association between health and longevity. It is expected that healthy, robust people will live, on average, longer than frail people. This heterogeneity in terms of robustness/frailty may explain the shape of the mortality trajectory with age, ie. the oldest old seem to follow a lower mortality schedule (Vaupel et al, 1979). On the other hand, many people wonder about the relationship between longevity and health. Are we living longer because we are in better health? Are we living longer in good health? Or are we merely surviving longer whatever our health status? In other words, can we live in good health as long as we can survive? And this is exactly the purpose of health expectancies: monitoring how long people live in various health statuses (Sanders, 1964; Sullivan, 1971; Robine et al, 2003a).
Article navigation
Review Article|
June 14 2009
The relationship between longevity and healthy life expectancy Available to Purchase
Jean‐Marie Robine;
Jean‐Marie Robine
Sciences and Humanities, Nihon University Advanced Research Institute, Tokyo
Search for other works by this author on:
Yasuhiko Saito;
Yasuhiko Saito
Sciences and Humanities, Nihon University Advanced Research Institute, Tokyo
Search for other works by this author on:
Carol Jagger
Carol Jagger
Department of Health Sciences, University of Leicester, UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2042-8766
Print ISSN: 1471-7794
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2009
Quality of Ageing (2009) 10 (2): 5–14.
Citation
Robine J, Saito Y, Jagger C (2009), "The relationship between longevity and healthy life expectancy". Quality of Ageing, Vol. 10 No. 2 pp. 5–14, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/14717794200900012
Download citation file:
2,693
Views
Suggested Reading
Are visible minorities “invisible” in Canadian health data and research? A scoping review
International Journal of Migration, Health and Social Care (March,2017)
Who wins the paralympic medals? An analysis of the socio-economic determinants
Journal of Asian Business and Economic Studies (May,2022)
Mentally ill prisoners in Australia have poor physical health
Int J Prison Health (February,2007)
The mortality risk of pensions – methods of control and policy implications for the UK
Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance (October,2006)
Human mortality: written in the stars?
Journal of Risk Finance (January,2007)
Related Chapters
Maternal and Perinatal Health and the Impact on Children
Children Around the World: The Future of Our Earth
The Listed Family-owned Enterprise: Best of Both Worlds or Destructive Paradoxes
Listed Family Companies
Growing Old, Caring and Being Cared for: Redefining the Place of the Elderly in Family Life
Reframing Developmental Psychology: Perspectives from the Global South
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
