Linked Data API

Show Search Form

Search Results

1137951
star this property registered interest false more like this
unstar this property date less than 2019-07-09more like thismore than 2019-07-09
star this property answering body
Department of Health and Social Care remove filter
star this property answering dept id 17 more like this
star this property answering dept short name Health and Social Care more like this
star this property answering dept sort name Health and Social Care more like this
star this property hansard heading Life Expectancy more like this
star this property house id 2 more like this
star this property legislature
25277
star this property pref label House of Lords more like this
star this property question text To ask Her Majesty's Government what assessment they have made of why the UK had one of the largest slowdowns in improvements in life expectancy between 2011 and 2016 out of the 19 countries analysed by the Office for National Statistics in August 2018. more like this
star this property tabling member printed
Lord Mendelsohn more like this
star this property uin HL17050 more like this
star this property answer
answer
star this property is ministerial correction false more like this
star this property date of answer remove filter
unstar this property answer text <p>Life expectancy is as high as it has ever been in this country, but the rate of increase in life expectancy has slowed down in recent years. To better understand the reasons for the slowdown, the Department commissioned Public Health England to publish <em>A review of recent trends in mortality in England</em>, which includes comparison to other parts of the United Kingdom, the European Union and United States of America. A copy of the review is attached.</p><p>The overall slowdown in improvements is due to a range of factors operating simultaneously across a wide range of age groups, places, and causes of death. Issues include:</p><p> </p><p>- the slowdown in improvement in mortality from heart disease and stroke, which are the leading causes of death. This is partly influenced by the increasing prevalence of diabetes, obesity, and low physical activity;</p><p>- the size and frequency of recent winter peaks in mortality, which were influenced by the intensity and dominant type of influenza circulating, flu vaccine uptake and effectiveness, and is sometimes exacerbated by cold weather, especially among the very elderly people living with conditions such as dementia. Housing and fuel poverty are key to cold weather vulnerability;</p><p>- in younger adults, the cause of death that had the biggest impact was accidental poisoning, a large proportion of these deaths are due to drug misuse; and</p><p>- small increases in mortality rates from chronic lower respiratory disease in males and females, and other causes in males (including cirrhosis and other liver diseases).</p><p> </p><p>The Government remains committed to giving people five extra years of healthy, independent life by 2035 and to ensuring that everyone gets the same great healthcare no matter where they live, backed by our Long Term Plan for the National Health Service.</p>
star this property answering member printed Baroness Blackwood of North Oxford more like this
star this property question first answered
less than 2019-07-17T13:35:13.033Zmore like thismore than 2019-07-17T13:35:13.033Z
unstar this property answering member
4019
star this property label Biography information for Baroness Blackwood of North Oxford more like this
star this property attachment
1
star this property file name Recent_trends_in_mortality_in_England.pdf more like this
star this property title A review of recent trends in mortality in England remove filter
star this property tabling member
4286
unstar this property label Biography information for Lord Mendelsohn more like this