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Scots stay healthy for longer – but still die earlier than rest of UK

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Published Date: 28 November 2008
SCOTS are living longer without suffering the effects of poor health, but still have the lowest life expectancy in the UK.
Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) yesterday showed that, across the UK, the length of time men could expect to live without disability had increased from 60 in 2000-2 to 62 in 2004-6.

During the same period, disability-free li
fe expectancy rose from 63 to 64 in women.

Scottish men saw a big improvement, meaning an extra 20 months of life free of disability such as dementia, heart disease or another chronic condition.

Campaigners welcomed the improvements, but warned more needed to be done to care for the ageing population.

The report, published in Health Statistics Quarterly, found that, at birth in 2004-6, Scottish males could expect to live for an average of 74.6 years, compared with 77.2 years in England. Scottish women's life expectancy was 79.6 years – the lowest in the UK.

The figures showed Scottish men enjoyed a longer disability-free life than those in Wales or Northern Ireland – 62 years compared with 60 for the other two areas. For women, disability-free life expectancy was 63 in Scotland, 64 in England and 61 in Northern Ireland.

Lindsay Scott, from Help the Aged Scotland, welcomed the increase in healthy lifespan, but he warned improvements in care were not happening quickly enough to keep up with the growing number of older people needing help. "We have an ageing population and nobody wants to experience poor health as they get older and even before they retire," he said.

"The fact is that our facilities to take care of this ageing population are currently not good enough and we need to look at how we are going to fund that."

A spokeswoman for the Scottish Government said: "It is good to know that healthy life in Scotland is improving, but it is not improving fast enough."



The full article contains 337 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 27 November 2008 9:55 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

,

28/11/2008 03:41:44
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2

Guga II,

Rockall 28/11/2008 04:05:29
Not forgetting that the average male life expectancy in Calton in Glasgow is 53 years. All part of the "Union dividend".
3

fife runner,

28/11/2008 05:32:55
people want to die young. that is why they live the lifestyle they do. they have made choices.
4

Corky,

28/11/2008 06:28:07
Scott Webb,

I did what you suggested and read up about it and this is not eugenics.

Eugenics is a deliberate policy of selective breeding and forced sterilisation. This is an unfortunate consequence of people living unhealthy lives despite the very public efforts of successive governments.

Also my recent statistics lecture covered this subject and the skew in Calton's figures are partly due to high infant mortality. The difference in life expectancy for a male having reached the age of 50 is not very different in Calton than elsewhere in Scotland.
5

,

28/11/2008 06:40:08
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,

28/11/2008 06:41:14
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7

!Ya basta!,

28/11/2008 09:09:11
The improvements seem minimal but at least its something. However, I suspect that even with future treatment improvements, when the current batch of binge drinking processed food eaters start getting into their 40s and 50s we will see a backward step again.

Personally I would tax the hell out of alcohol and processed food producers and use the dividend to subsidise production of healthy food and sale of such foods in poor areas, plus launch a hard-hitting long-term national campaign aimed at getting some kind of cultural shift away from this stupid culture of passive acceptance of consumerism/consumption of processed food and ridiculous amounts of booze. I would ban advertising of all alcohol and processed food products too. Shut down all fast food outlets aswell. Ban plastic cutlery and crockery, small packets of sauce and make everyone use a cloth napkin (jokin about the last one).

I can't be bothered to look at your vid SW, please just make the case, but can't see how eugenics is at all relevant, this is about the profit motive of corporations wanting to add value to food its not a program of government eradication of stupid people.
8

!Ya basta!,

28/11/2008 09:10:07
So looking forward to SW, Guga, Rockall etc. comments
9

,

28/11/2008 09:28:52
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10

Mcsnagpile,

28/11/2008 09:33:17
Put it all into the bio-fuel refinery.
He was raring to go when he was twenty --but he did 100 miles an hour at sixty.

I blame it all on the disinfectant in the Rubby Curries.
11

G,

dndy 28/11/2008 10:36:13
There is some evidence that Glasgow's terrible health record is partly due to some kind of genetic predisposition...conditions that protected against the great infections of the late victorian and early 20th century period MAy have preselected people who are more prone to cardiovascular disease - evolution in action....BUT it is also likely that the poorest people have not managed to escape the worst areas and have bred an under-nourished underclass....]
lets see what the SNP do about this problem....
12

T-bone,

28/11/2008 11:03:47
#11 G
"lets see what the SNP do about this problem...."

Don't hold your breath....!
13

Mcsnagpile,

28/11/2008 11:30:41
I remember having occasion to enter a tenement flat in Gallowgate,Glasgow, many years ago. There was a man and two children sitting on the floor with blankets around them. It was late November and rather cold. The flat had neither furniture nor floor coverings. They were huddled around the fire-grate in which burned the wood from the floorboards. I wonder if the children are still alive or healthy.
14

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28/11/2008 11:43:25
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28/11/2008 11:58:19
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28/11/2008 12:44:56
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alsirat,

Edinburgh 28/11/2008 12:57:07
Might it be that the Scottish figures are dominated by Glasgow, whereas the English figures are not influenced by any one area in the same way. I would imagine that the figures for Glasgow would have much in common with Merseyside, and that the rest of Scotland may be close to the average for England as a whole.
18

Brian Ferrari,

28/11/2008 13:02:11
Scott Web

You do like your conspiracy theories don't you?

The reason you don't post what you believe is that you know that you would be laughed off this thread.

Try engaging with others - you might find it therapeutic. It might also bring you back to Planet Earth. (Watch out for the Space Alients on your way here though.)
19

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28/11/2008 13:04:18
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28/11/2008 13:12:02
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28/11/2008 13:13:43
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28/11/2008 13:17:18
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28/11/2008 13:17:45
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alsirat,

28/11/2008 13:17:55
Thanks Vincent. A related factor could be the weather. If you live in, say, the South of France, as well as there being all sorts of locally grown, healthy fruit and salad vegetables on offer, you feel more like eating that kind of food in that climate. Even if it were avilable, that kind of food looses it's appeal in the face of our cold, dark Winters.
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28/11/2008 13:20:25
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28/11/2008 13:30:40
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28/11/2008 13:31:36
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TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 28/11/2008 13:34:59
9 Vincent

I am interested to know what "hygiene" factors and "life choices" were observed by you in your work in the East End of Glasgow.

Perhaps announcing them could enable all Scots to prolong their lives without disabling and chronic diseases.
29

alsirat,

28/11/2008 13:46:42
Vincent, I am sure that you have something there. I have lived in an (ex)industrial area of South Wales. You probably needed a huge fried breakfast if you are then going to spend the day in a coal mine or a rolling mill. However, although the industry was going fast, people still had the fry-up, though they would spend the day doing nothing more taxing than watching Satelite TV.
30

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28/11/2008 13:53:17
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31

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 28/11/2008 14:36:20
30 Vincent

Would you please leave out my academic credentials as they have nothing to do with this matter?

I bicycle for at least 3 hours a day during spring, summer and fall, TRY to limit my alcoholic intake to three glasses of red wine with meals (on the orders of my endocrinologist), walk to work and to do the shopping when the snow here isn't five feet deep and the sidewalks have not been plowed, carbohydrates are my enemy so I severely restrict them, adopt a positive attitude most of the time, terminate friendships with persons who are negative, have good dental health, eat five small meals a day, TRY to get at least 6 hours of sleep per night (I am a VERY early riser - say, 4:00 a.m.), walking my Black Labrador Retriever "Chester" keeps me - and him - active, swim in the temperate months, stay out of the sun as much as possible, only take prescribed medication and don't do "recreational" drugs, read more books than I watch television programmes, take the stairs down at least 4 flights when possible and up 4 flights when not burdened by packages, exchange health and living tips with friends, don't believe everything about health and well-being that I read in the media (especially "scientific studies" and "statistical studies", eat more sustainable fish and chicken and vegetables than I do red meat,buy organic when it is not overpriced, drink at least three cups of black tea per day and one of green, etc.

I know this is more detail than you may want or need but it works for me and may enable me to attain a crotchety and venerable age.

Many of my friends and acquaintances do likewise and we may be communicating for a long time as we totter and lurch towards decrepitude and cantankerousness.
32

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28/11/2008 15:05:32
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33

AJ Fife,

28/11/2008 15:11:37
TCW#31,

I'm trying to build up a mental picture of you! The only bit that's missing is what you wear around your neck; do wear a little bow tie or an old school tie/heraldric pin ensemble?
34

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 28/11/2008 15:25:45
33 AJ Fife

Verrrry funny. Actually, the Windsor knot is a good one to throttle me with.

I am quite unremarkable in my appearance but am not unattractive nor a drooling ogre.

I only wear bow ties when required for semi- or offical functions requiring such and wear other ties under duress.

I have an heraldic pin collection and other such gew-gaws inherited from my father.
35

EnglishHighlander,

28/11/2008 16:18:47
#31 TimW1234
Why can't I help thinking about the Baz Luhrmann - Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)tune when reading your comment?

;-)

 

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