Baby
girls born in 2016 are likely to live past the age of 90, new research
has revealed according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
Girl child's lifespan. Mail illustration
One in three baby girls born last year will live into their 90s, new data released today reveals.
While a fifth of baby boys can expect to become nonagenarian, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
Meanwhile, the proportion of the population who are aged 90 or
older has grown rapidly, with nearly 15,000 people aged 100 or over last
year.
In figures released today the ONS said 32 per cent of females born last year newborns would live into their 90s.
This is double what the figure was in 1982, when just 14 per cent of female newborns were given the life expectancy.
And it is 50 per cent higher than it was 20 years ago, when 20.5 per cent of baby girls could expect to live that long.
Baby girls can still expect to live longer than boys, with 20 per
cent of boys born last year expected to last until they are 90 – up from
five per cent in 1982.
The ONS said: ‘A consequence of increasing life expectancy has
been an increase in the proportion of the UK population expected to
survive to older ages.’
But while Britain has an ageing population, the ONS said improvements in life expectancy ‘have recently slowed in the UK’.
The ONS added: ‘The population aged 90 and over has grown more
rapidly than most younger ages in recent years but it remains a small
part of the total UK population
‘Historical birth patterns which resulted in rapid ageing and
growth of the population aged 90 and over in recent years have now
largely played out, and ageing and growth have returned to a longer-term
average.’
The figures also show that life expectancy for babies in Scotland continues to lag behind the rest of the UK.
The ONS said this could be down to higher rates of smoking and
drinking which can result in a plethora of health problems including
heart disease.
Babies born in Scotland last year can expect to live around two years less than their cousins in the rest of the UK.
While an estimated 14,910 people were aged 100 and over in the UK in 2016 – up from 14,520 in 2015.
This means an increasing number of people in Britain have lived
long enough to receive a birthday telegram to mark their centenary from
the Queen.
-MailOnline
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