The Nicoya region of Costa Rica: A high longevity island for elderly males
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Date
Authors
Rosero Bixby, Luis
Dow, William H.
Rehkopf, David H.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Vienna Yearbook of Population Research, Vol 11
Abstract
Reliable data show that the Nicoyan region of Costa Rica is a hot spot of high
longevity. A survival follow-up of 16,300 elderly Costa Ricans estimated a Nicoya
death rate ratio (DRR) for males 1990–2011 of 0.80 (0.69–0.93 CI). For a 60-yearold
Nicoyan male, the probability of becoming centenarian is seven times that of a
Japanese male, and his life expectancy is 2.2 years greater. This Nicoya advantage
does not occur in females, is independent of socio-economic conditions, disappears
in out-migrants and comes from lower cardiovascular (CV) mortality (DRR = 0.65).
Nicoyans have lower levels of biomarkers of CV risk; they are also leaner, taller
and suffer fewer disabilities. Two markers of ageing and stress—telomere length
and dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate—are also more favourable. The Nicoya diet is
prosaic and abundant in traditional foods like rice, beans and animal protein, with
low glycemic index and high fibre content.
Description
artículo -- Universidad de Costa Rica, Centro Centroamericano de Población (CCP). 2013
Keywords
Investigación demográfica, Población, Nutrición, Salud
Citation
http://www.oeaw.ac.at/vid/publications/VYPR2013/rosero-bixby_etal_nicoya.html