Death rates have been dropping for Americans of almost every age
for decades now. A study of centenarians, Americans 100 years and
older, suggests that they are joining the ranks, as their death rates
started to decline in 2008.
Using
data from the United States Census Bureau and death certificates filed
in the United States, a study by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention determined the death rate and causes of death in this
oldest-of-the-old population between 2000 and 2014.
The
study reported that, although Americans in their very golden years are
still rare, the population has grown by 44% in recent years, from 50,281
in 2000 to 72,197 in 2014.
The study found that, after increasing 10%
between 2000 and 2008, the death rate for female centenarians dropped
14% between 2008 and 2014 to 36.5 deaths for every 100 women. The death
rate among males in this age group dropped by 20% from 2008 to 2014,
after increasing 41% between 2000 and 2008, and was 33.2 per 100 in
2014.
"It looks like the population 100
and older is living longer now so the [death] rate has decreased, but I
don't know exactly what caused that," said Dr. Jiaquan Xu, an
epidemiologist at the CDC National Center for Health Statistics and
author of the study, which was released in January.
It
is also not clear what the death rate of centenarians looked like
before the 21st century, and whether the recent decline is a new trend
or a continuation of a past trend. The study did not include earlier
years before 2000 because the age reported on death certificates was
less reliable, Xu said.
There are many
reasons that good data were hard to come by for centenarians back then,
and it has not necessarily gotten much better since 2000, said Dr.
Thomas Perls, geriatrician and director of the New England Centenarian
Study at Boston Medical Center. For one, it has been hard for the Census
Bureau to get a good handle on how many centenarians there are in the
United States, Perls said. And when an elderly family member passes
away, their relatives might overestimate their age on the death
certificate. "It's a story that grew and grew, like the fish (you
caught) that got bigger and bigger," Perls said.
Because of these reasons, it is hard to
know if the death rate among Americans 100 and up has truly been on the
decline since 2008. It is probably some part fact and some part
artifact, Perls said.
"It could
decline as we have better medical care, as people take on healthy habits
and exercise more and don't smoke ... but I don't know if it will
decrease by 20%," as was seen among male centenarians between 2008 and
2014, Perls said
What do centenarians die of?
Although
Xu is not sure what could account for the declining death rate he found
among centenarians, he does think at least part of it could be because
fewer are dying of common killers, such as heart disease and stroke.
The
study found that, between 2000 and 2014, the rates of death due to
heart disease, stroke and flu and pneumonia, which were the top three
causes of death for female and male centenarians in 2000, dropped by
24%, 31% and 48%, respectively.
"If you diagnose chronic diseases (such as
heart disease) earlier and get proper treatment, those can be
controlled or even prevented. Then people with those kinds of diseases
could live longer," Xu said. As for the lower rates of flu and
pneumonia, they are probably due to more vaccinations, as well as older
people just being healthier in general and better able to recover from
the flu, he added.
Over this period,
other less common causes of death crept up. The death rates due to
Alzheimer's disease, high blood pressure (and related problems such as
kidney disease) and respiratory diseases grew by 119%, 88% and 34%,
respectively, between 2000 and 2014. Alzheimer's shot up from the fifth
to the second leading cause of death among female centenarians from 2000
to 2014; among men, it was not on the top five in 2000 to number five
in 2014.
However, Perls doubts there
has really been an increase in the number of centenarians who have and
are dying from Alzheimer's. "Doctors are much better now about
accurately indicating whether a person (in their 100s) has Alzheimer's.
Either they didn't recognize it before or thought, 'What do you expect
for your age?' So I think it's just reported much more," he said.
A 'hardy' bunch
Although it might sound like good news that centenarians seem to have joined nearly every other age group (other than middle-aged white Americans)
in living longer, it is too soon to celebrate. "Once people get to be
so old, the majority, I think, need help for their daily life. So I'm
not sure if it is a good thing or a bad thing. It is a quality of life
issue," Xu said.
But there is at least
some reason to be optimistic. "What we have found ... is that even with
pretty significant physical limitations and impairments, their
subjective well being and amount they value life is surprisingly high,"
said Kathrin Boerner, associate professor of gerontology at the
University of Massachusetts Boston.
Nevertheless,
the explosion in the very aging population, those 95 years and older,
and the chronic diseases that most of them have is already creating an
"intense burden for the health care system," Boerner said, adding that
it is "totally not ready for it."
There
are many questions around how to care for the oldest of the old, and it
probably doesn't just come down to building more nursing homes, Boerner
said. Many of them want to stay in their own homes, and research
suggests they are doing that. "In our studies, 60% of those 95 years and
above are living in the community. They are not necessarily healthy but
they are a hardy people," Boerner said.
Source: CNN
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