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40 Could Be The New 30 As
Scientists Redefine Age
Is 40 really the new 30?
Everyone is getting older but in many ways people today act
younger than their parents did at the same age.
Scientists have defined a new age concept and believe it could
explain why populations are aging, but at the same time seem
to be getting younger.
Instead of measuring aging by how long people have lived so
far, the scientists have factored in how many more years people
can still look forward to.
"Using that measure, the average person can get younger in the
sense that he or she can have even more years to live as time
goes on," said Warren Sanderson, of the University of New York
in Stony Brook.
He and Sergei Scherbov, of the Vienna Institute of Demography
at the Austrian Academy of Sciences, have used their method to
estimate how the proportion of elderly people in Germany, Japan
and the United States will change in the future.
The average German was 39.9 years old in 2000 and could plan
to live for another 39.2 years, according to research reported
in the science journal Nature on Wednesday.
However, by 2050 the average German would be 51.9 years old
and could expect another 37.1 years of life. So middle age in
2050 would come around 52 instead of 40 as in 2000.
"As people have more and more years to live they have to save
more and plan more and they effectively are behaving as if they
were younger," said Sanderson.
Five years ago, the average American was 35.3 years old and
could plan for 43.5 more years of life. By 2050, the researchers
estimate it would increase to 41.7 years and 45.8 future years.
"A lot of our skills, our education, our savings and the way
we deal with our health care depend a great deal on how many
years we have to live," said Sanderson.
"This dimension of how many years we have to live has been completely
ignored in the discussion of aging so far." Reference
Source 89
June
8, 2005
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