The exceptionally high life expectancy of Costa Rican nonagenarians
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Date
Authors
Rosero Bixby, Luis
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Demography 45(3): 673–691
Abstract
Robust data from a voter registry show that Costa Rican nonagenarians have an exceptionally
high live expectancy. Mortality at age 90 in Costa Rica is at least 14% lower than an average of 13
high-income countries. This advantage increases with age by 1% per year. Males have an additional
12% advantage. Age-90 life expectancy for males is 4.4 years, one-half year more than any other
country in the world. These estimates do not use problematic data on reported ages, but ages are
computed from birth dates in the Costa Rican birth-registration ledgers. Census data confi rm the
exceptionally high survival of elderly Costa Ricans, especially males. Comparisons with the United
States and Sweden show that the Costa Rican advantage comes mostly from reduced incidence of
cardiovascular diseases, coupled with a low prevalence of obesity, as the only available explanatory
risk factor. Costa Rican nonagenarians are survivors of cohorts that underwent extremely harsh
health conditions when young, and their advantage might be just a heterogeneity in frailty effect that
might disappear in more recent cohorts. The availability of reliable estimates for the oldest-old in
low- income populations is extremely rare. These results may enlighten the debate over how harsh
early-life health conditions affect older-age mortality.
Description
Artículo científico--Instituto de Investigaciones en Salud-- 2008
Keywords
adulto mayor, anciano, nonagenarios, esperanza de vida, lonegvidad
Citation
http://ccp.ucr.ac.cr/creles/pdf/rosero60.pdf
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