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New Zealander's Life expectancy keeps increasingNew Zealanders' life expectancy keeps increasingBy Martin Johnston NZ Herald Start saving for a long retirement. We're going to live far longer if last century's revolutionary changes in health and medicine continue.Some average New Zealanders' extra years on Earth will be attributable to developments in medical science - the next-generation Herceptin, perhaps, or the perfection of artificially grown liver transplants. Or the eventual introduction of a polypill, or the wider use of statins to reduce cholesterol. Lifestyle Much of the anticipated extra life expectancy will be down to lifestyle - good diet, exercise and not smoking. "We're gaining about a month a year in life expectancy, which is pretty amazing," says Auckland University epidemiologist Professor Rod Jackson. "I don't think there's any suggestion that it's slowing down. It is driven primarily by reductions in vascular disease, primarily heart attacks and strokes. I don't think there's any indication that there's any kind of upper limit that we can't go beyond." Life expectancy at birth was 76.3 years for males and 81.1 for females in 2000-2002. A century earlier it was a shade under 60 for males and just over 60 for females. On the current path, the figures will be 82 for males and 87 for females by 2030. And if, as many hope, tobacco smoking is history by 2020, the seven-year gap in life expectancy between non-Maori and Maori - whose smoking rate is more than twice the national average - will close more rapidly. Professor Jackson says ending smoking will have a dramatic effect on life expectancy by reducing smoking conditions such as lung cancer and heart disease. "Once you stop everyone smoking you've added on average 10 years to 20 per cent of the adult population. Its a big ticket item." On the food side, we could gain years by consuming less saturated fat (butter has plenty) and eating a lot of more fruit and vegetables. By contrast, the contribution of medical breakthroughs to longer lives will be more modest, but exciting. Epigenetics The Prime Minister's chief science adviser, Professor Sir Peter Gluckman, the former director of the Liggins Institute at Auckland University, is uneasy about picking what life will look like in 2030. "I don't think we can assume we are going to have greater life expectancy. People are living in an obeso-genic environment [one which promotes obesity]. We haven't solved the issue of how people should live in an obeso-genic world." |