Global, regional, and national age-sex-specific mortality and life expectancy, 1950–2017: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017
Published November 8, 2018, in The Lancet (opens in a new window)
Abstract
Assessments of age-specific mortality and life expectancy have been done by the UN Population Division, Department of Economics and Social Affairs (UNPOP), the United States Census Bureau, WHO, and as part of previous iterations of the Global Burden of Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD). Previous iterations of the GBD used population estimates from UNPOP, which were not derived in a way that was internally consistent with the estimates of the numbers of deaths in the GBD. The present iteration of the GBD, GBD 2017, improves on previous assessments and provides timely estimates of the mortality experience of populations globally.
Methods
The GBD uses all available data to produce estimates of mortality rates between 1950 and 2017 for 23 age groups, both sexes, and 918 locations, including 195 countries and territories and subnational locations for 16 countries. Data used include vital registration systems, sample registration systems, household surveys (complete birth histories, summary birth histories, sibling histories), censuses (summary birth histories, household deaths), and Demographic Surveillance Sites. In total, this analysis used 8,259 data sources. Estimates of the probability of death between birth and the age of 5 years and between ages 15 and 60 years are generated and then input into a model life table system to produce complete life tables for all locations and years. Fatal discontinuities and mortality due to HIV/AIDS are analyzed separately and then incorporated into the estimation. We analyze the relationship between age-specific mortality and development status using the Socio-demographic Index, a composite measure based on fertility under the age of 25 years, education, and income. There are four main methodological improvements in GBD 2017 compared with GBD 2016: 622 additional data sources have been incorporated; new estimates of population, generated by the GBD study, are used; statistical methods used in different components of the analysis have been further standardized and improved; and the analysis has been extended backward in time by two decades to start in 1950.
Findings
Globally, 18.7% (95% uncertainty interval 18.4–19.0) of deaths were registered in 1950 and that proportion has been steadily increasing since, with 58.8% (58.2–59.3) of all deaths being registered in 2015. At the global level, between 1950 and 2017, life expectancy increased from 48.1 years (46.5–49.6) to 70.5 years (70.1–70.8) for men and from 52.9 years (51.7–54.0) to 75.6 years (75.3–75.9) for women. Despite this overall progress, there remains substantial variation in life expectancy at birth in 2017, which ranges from 49.1 years (46.5–51.7) for men in the Central African Republic to 87.6 years (86.9–88.1) among women in Singapore. The greatest progress across age groups was for children younger than 5 years; under-5 mortality dropped from 216.0 deaths (196.3–238.1) per 1,000 livebirths in 1950 to 38.9 deaths (35.6–42.8) per 1,000 livebirths in 2017, with huge reductions across countries. Nevertheless, there were still 5.4 million (5.2–5.6) deaths among children younger than 5 years in the world in 2017. Progress has been less pronounced and more variable for adults, especially for adult males, who had stagnant or increasing mortality rates in several countries. The gap between male and female life expectancy between 1950 and 2017, while relatively stable at the global level, shows distinctive patterns across super-regions and has consistently been the largest in central Europe, eastern Europe, and central Asia, and smallest in south Asia. Performance was also variable across countries and time in observed mortality rates compared with those expected on the basis of development.
Interpretation
This analysis of age-sex-specific mortality shows that there are remarkably complex patterns in population mortality across countries. The findings of this study highlight global successes, such as the large decline in under-5 mortality, which reflects significant local, national, and global commitment and investment over several decades. However, they also bring attention to mortality patterns that are a cause for concern, particularly among adult men and, to a lesser extent, women, whose mortality rates have stagnated in many countries over the time period of this study, and in some cases are increasing.
Citation
GBD 2017 Mortality Collaborators. Global, regional, and national age-sex-specific mortality and life expectancy, 1950–2017: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017. The Lancet. 8 Nov 2018;392:1684-735. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)31891-9.
Authors
- Daniel Dicker,
- Christopher J.L. Murray,
- Emmanuela Gakidou,
- Grant Nguyen,
- Ashkan Afshin,
- Christine Allen,
- Megha Arora,
- Greg Bertolacci,
- Charlton Callendar,
- Austin Carter,
- Aaron Cohen,
- Elizabeth Cromwell,
- Matthew Cunningham,
- Lalit Dandona,
- Rakhi Dandona,
- Nicole Weaver,
- Louisa Degenhardt,
- Selina Deiparine,
- Samath D. Dharmaratne,
- Dirk Douwes-Schultz,
- Charbel El Bcheraoui,
- Tamer Farag,
- Valery Feigin,
- Sam Finegold,
- Kyle Foreman,
- Tahvi Frank,
- John Fuller,
- Nancy Fullman,
- Simon Hay,
- Yihua He,
- Nathaniel Henry,
- Chad Ikeda,
- Spencer James,
- Sarah Johnson,
- Nicholas Kassebaum,
- Grant Kemp,
- Ibrahim Khalil,
- Jun Kim,
- Rachel Kulikoff,
- Michael Kutz,
- Heidi Larson,
- Stephen Lim,
- Rafael Lozano,
- Emilie Maddison,
- Felix Masiye,
- Awoke Misganaw Temesgen,
- Ali Mokdad,
- Erin Mullany,
- Kate Muller,
- Mohsen Naghavi,
- Molly Nixon,
- Elaine Nsoesie,
- David Pigott,
- Sarah Ray,
- Bobby Reiner,
- Nikolas Reinig,
- Joseph Salama,
- Kat Schelonka,
- Katya Shackelford,
- Naris Silpakit,
- Vinay Srinivasan,
- Caitlyn Steiner,
- Leo Stewart,
- Patrick Sur,
- Dillon Sylte,
- Anna Torre,
- Stein Emil Vollset,
- Theo Vos,
- Harvey Whiteford,
- Jamal Yearwood,
- Hunter York,
- Luisa Sorio Flor
Datasets
All our datasets are housed in our data catalog, the Global Health Data Exchange (GHDx). Visit the GHDx to download data from this article.