Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byChristina White Modified over 8 years ago
1
Chapter 8: Health and Longevity Beyond Economic Growth: An Introduction to Sustainable Development By Tatyana P. Soubbotina 1
2
Overview of Chapter 8: Health and Longevity Global trends Life expectancy and under-5 mortality rates have improved for most countries Population age structures How many non-workers must be supported by each worker? The burden of infectious disease HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis, Malaria Lifestyle challenges to health and longevity Smoking 2
3
How do we measure health and longevity? Two important indicators: Life expectancy at birth is the number of years a newborn baby would live if prevailing health conditions stay the same Under-5 mortality rate is the number of newborn babies who are likely to die before reaching age 5 per 1,000 births Exercise: Look at these indicators in Gapminder to see how health has improved over time. 3
4
Global trends in health and longevity Indicators of health and longevity are better in high income countries (Figure 8.1) Improving in all regions (Figure 8.2) as GDP per capita increases Other factors in improving health: Improvements in medical technology Better public health services: clean water, sanitation, safe food Education (especially of girls) Remaining problems: Malnutrition, communicable diseases, maternal mortality 4
5
Population age structures change over time In countries with high birth-rates and high death rates, much of the population is young Population pyramid is triangular (Figure 8.3 on left) In countries with low birth-rates and low death rates, more of the population is adult or elderly Population pyramid is pear-shaped or rectangular (Fig 8.3 rt.) Age structure determines the age dependency ratio, the ratio of non-workers to workers Low-income countries have “too many” young people High-income countries have “too many” old people 5
6
Infectious diseases are a leading cause of mortality in developing countries HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria are major killers No effective vaccines Treatment is costly (HIV/AIDS) or resistant to drugs (TB) and depends on group behavior (contagion) Prevention is difficult among poorest people in poorest countries Why no vaccines? Not profitable for drug companies Can donor governments and international development organizations fill the gap? 6
7
Lifestyle choices can affect health Health problems from smoking (and obesity) are driven by choices and can be prevented Much higher prevalence of smoking among males in low-income countries (See Figure 8.4) High-income countries have done much to reduce smoking by using taxes, education, and advertising limits 7
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.