Title: Longevity in the 21st Century
1Longevity in the 21st Century
2Longevity in the 21st Century
- Background
- 20th Century Trends
- International Experience
- Medical Advances
- The Threat From Infectious Diseases
- Projecting the Future
- Implications
3Longevity in the 21st Century
- Background
- 20th Century Trends
- International Experience
- Medical Advances
- The Threat From Infectious Diseases
- Projecting the Future
- Implications
4Background
- The UK Actuarial Profession established a
Working Party in 2003 to produce a review paper
on longevity trends - Richard Willets (chairman)
- Adrian Gallop
- Tony Leandro
- Joseph Lu
- Angus Macdonald
- Keith Miller
- Stephen Richards
- Neil Robjohns
- John Ryan
- Howard Waters
5Background
- The paper Longevity in the 21st Century was
presented to the Faculty of Actuaries on 15 March
2004 and the Institute of Actuaries on 26 April
2004 - A separate paper The cohort effect insights
and explanations (Richard Willets) was presented
at the same meetings
6Background
- A Working Party of the Continuous Mortality
Investigation Bureau (C.M.I.B.) is considering
the issue of future mortality projection - New projections are planned for 2005 to be used
with new 00 series tables - This group published Working Paper 3
Projecting future mortality a discussion
paper in March 2004 - A recent seminar at Staple Inn backed the call
for measures of uncertainty in projections
7Longevity in the 21st Century
- Background
- 20th Century Trends
- International Experience
- Medical Advances
- The Threat From Infectious Diseases
- Projecting the Future
- Implications
820th Century Trends
Reduction in the mortality rate for males aged
65-74 in the England Wales population since 1901
- 20 fall between 1901 1969 (68 years)
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data
920th Century Trends
Reduction in the mortality rate for males aged
65-74 in the England Wales population since 1901
- 20 fall between 1901 1969 (68 years)
- 20 fall between 1969 1986 (17 years)
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data
1020th Century Trends
Reduction in the mortality rate for males aged
65-74 in the England Wales population since 1901
- 20 fall between 1901 1969 (68 years)
- 20 fall between 1969 1986 (17 years)
- 20 fall between 1986 1996 (10 years)
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data
1120th Century Trends
Reduction in the mortality rate for males aged
65-74 in the England Wales population since 1901
- 20 fall between 1901 1969 (68 years)
- 20 fall between 1969 1986 (17 years)
- 20 fall between 1986 1996 (10 years)
- 20 fall between 1996 2002 (6 years)
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data
12At the beginning of the 21st Century we are
observing accelerating rates of improvement at
older ages
20th Century Trends
Average annual rates of mortality improvement for
males in the population of England Wales
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data
trend lines fitted using log linear regression
Note mortality improvement is taken to mean
the reduction in mortality rate
13At the beginning of the 21st Century we are
observing accelerating rates of improvement at
older ages
20th Century Trends
Average annual rates of mortality improvement for
females in the population of England Wales
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data
trend lines fitted using log linear regression
Note mortality improvement is taken to mean
the reduction in mortality rate
14Heart disease mortality is falling sharply
20th Century Trends
Heart disease deaths per 1,000,000 males aged
60-69 in England Wales
Premature death from heart disease in England
could be almost unheard of within a decade
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data
15Mortality rates are falling in other causes
20th Century Trends
Deaths per 1,000,000 males aged 60-69 in Eng
Wales
Cancer
Stroke
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data
1620th Century Trends
- Future projections should be grounded in as good
an understanding of the past as possible - The paper focuses on five key forces currently
shaping the pattern of mortality change
1720th Century Trends
- The paper focuses on five key forces currently
shaping the pattern of mortality change- - The UK cohort effect
- The ageing of mortality improvement
- Past patterns of cigarette smoking
- Increased uncertainty at younger ages
- Widening social-economic class differentials
18Rate of mortality improvement by age group and
decade females in England Wales
The UK cohort effect
Source own calculations using O.N.S. figures
19Rate of mortality improvement by age group and
decade females in England Wales
The UK cohort effect
the cohort effect
Source own calculations using O.N.S. figures
20Rate of mortality improvement by age group and
decade males in England Wales
The UK cohort effect
the cohort effect
Source own calculations using O.N.S. figures
21Mortality projections
The UK cohort effect
- Faster improvements have been observed for the
UK generation born 1925-1945 centred on 1931 - This feature has been explicitly allowed for in
G.A.D. mortality projections since the 1990s - In 2002 the C.M.I.B. published a paper which
described a similar effect in insurance and
pensioner data centred on 1926 - The C.M.I.B. published three interim
projections which allowed for this feature (known
as the short, medium and long cohort
projections)
22Impact of year of birth in a model of mortality
change for males in the population of England
Wales
The UK cohort effect
Source own calculations using O.N.S. figures
23Impact of year of birth in a model of lung cancer
mortality change for males in the population of
EW
The UK cohort effect
Source own calculations using O.N.S. figures
24The UK cohort effect
Female cumulative constant tar cigarette
consumption (CCTCC) by age and central year of
birth, UK
Rate of lung cancer mortality for females in
England Wales by year of birth
Age group
Sources O.N.S. Lee et al (1993)
25Impact of year of birth in a model of heart
disease mortality change for males in the
population of EW
The UK cohort effect
Source own calculations using O.N.S. figures
26Impact of year of birth in a model of mortality
change for males in the population of EW
The UK cohort effect
Source own calculations using O.N.S. figures
27Impact of year of birth in a model of mortality
change for males in the population of England
Wales
The UK cohort effect
Second cohort due to a wider range of factors
First cohort largely due to trends in smoking
Source own calculations using O.N.S. figures
28Research in other fields
The UK cohort effect
- Researchers in a range of disciplines believe
that people born in different generations are
likely to experience different health
characteristics in later life - In epidemiology a life course approach to
understanding disease trends has developed
a degree of anticipation is possible within
lifetimesthrough those things which make an
imprint on life at one point, and which are
carried forward on into later life.
Professor Michael Wadsworth (1991)
29Possible causes of the UK cohort effect
The UK cohort effect
- Patterns of cigarette consumption
- World War II
- Birth rates
- Diet
- Welfare State
30The ageing of mortality improvement
The ages experiencing the most rapid change have
shifted upwards
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data for
males in England Wales
31The ageing of mortality improvement
The ages experiencing the most rapid change have
shifted upwards
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data for
males in England Wales
32Trends in cigarette consumption
Cigarette smoking
- Consumption of cigarettes in the UK has been
falling since the 1960s - Smoking prevalence rates stabilised in the 1990s
- The impact on mortality trends is difficult to
quantify because of the enduring nature of the
damage caused by cigarette smoking - Smoking patterns have certainly contributed
towards the cohort effect - Reduction in cigarette smoking may account for a
half to a third of recent improvements at some
ages
33Increased uncertainty at younger ages
Uncertainty at younger ages
- In the 1980s and 1990s improvements in
health-related causes were offset by
deteriorations in a range of different causes,
notably- - AIDS
- Drug alcohol abuse
- Liver disease
- Violent deaths
- Accidental deaths (other than motor vehicle)
34Mortality rates for men aged 20-39 in England
Wales as a of rate in 1989
Uncertainty at younger ages
Together these causes now account for 12 of all
deaths for this age group
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data for
males in England Wales
35Average annual rate of mortality improvement,
males aged 20-39, England Wales, 7 year rolling
averages
Uncertainty at younger ages
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data for
males in England Wales
36Uncertainty at younger ages
Average annual rates of mortality improvement for
the population of England Wales 1977 to 2002
Source own calculations using O.N.S. figures -
improvement rates for all ages between 20 and 89
have been used.
37Differential in life expectancy at age 65 between
manual and non-manual classes, England Wales,
1972-99
Widening socio-economic class differentials
Source own calculations using O.N.S. data for
males in England Wales
38Average annual rate of mortality improvement for
males in the population of England Wales and in
the C.M.I. dataset for males with life assurance
policies, 1961-1999
Widening socio-economic class differentials
Source own calculations using C.M.I.B. O.N.S.
data
39Longevity in the 21st Century
- Background
- 20th Century Trends
- International Experience
- Medical Advances
- The Threat From Infectious Diseases
- Projecting the Future
- Implications
40U.K. mortality rates by age relative to an
international average from 23 developed
countries
International experience
Source own calculations using W.H.O. data
41Expectation of life (years) for males at age 65
for selected countries in 2000
International experience
Source own calculations using W.H.O. data
42Pace of mortality improvement for Japanese
females by age and calendar year shaded area
shows where change is most rapid
International experience
Age 85
Age 75
Age 65
Age 55
Source own calculations using data from
www.mortality.org
1960
1970
1980
1990
43Pace of mortality improvement for Japanese
females by age and calendar year shaded area
shows where change is most rapid
International experience
Age 85
Age 75
Age 65
3.5 p.a. improvements at age 55
Age 55
Source own calculations using data from
www.mortality.org
1960
1970
1980
1990
44Pace of mortality improvement for Japanese
females by age and calendar year shaded area
shows where change is most rapid
International experience
Age 85
Age 75
4.5 p.a. improvements at age 65
Age 65
3.5 p.a. improvements at age 55
Age 55
Source own calculations using data from
www.mortality.org
1960
1970
1980
1990
45Pace of mortality improvement for Japanese
females by age and calendar year shaded area
shows where change is most rapid
International experience
Age 85
4.25 p.a. improvements at age 75
Age 75
4.5 p.a. improvements at age 65
Age 65
3.5 p.a. improvements at age 55
Age 55
Source own calculations using data from
www.mortality.org
1960
1970
1980
1990
46Pace of mortality improvement for Japanese
females by age and calendar year shaded area
shows where change is most rapid
International experience
4.0 p.a. improvements at age 85
Age 85
4.25 p.a. improvements at age 75
Age 75
4.5 p.a. improvements at age 65
Age 65
3.5 p.a. improvements at age 55
Age 55
Source own calculations using data from
www.mortality.org
1960
1970
1980
1990
47Ratio of average annual rate of improvement over
last 10 years vs. previous 30 years average
based on 5 countries (USA, England Wales,
France, Germany Japan)
International experience
Source own calculations using data from
www.mortality.org
48Longevity in the 21st Century
- Background
- 20th Century Trends
- International Experience
- Medical Advances
- The Threat From Infectious Diseases
- Projecting the Future
- Implications
49The pace of scientific development
Medical advances
- The pace of scientific development appears to be
accelerating - A substantial element of current improvements
are being driven by advances in medicine - Improvements in heart disease mortality have
been partially caused by- - new medication, e.g. beta-blockers statins
- new surgical interventions, e.g. CABG
angioplasty - Improvements in cancer mortality have been
partially caused by- - advances in treatment
- improvements in detection
50The pace of scientific development
Medical advances
- Will the accelerating pace of medical
advancement drive accelerating mortality
improvements? - Two case studies are considered-
- A polypill to treat cardio-vascular disease
- Research into the ageing process
51A polypill to treat cardiovascular disease
Medical advances
- The most important B.M.J. in 50 years. (?)
- Proposal is for a single pill consisting of low
doses of six (off-patent) drugs already used to
treat the risk factors of cardiovascular disease - a statin to reduce cholesterol
- 3 blood-pressure reducing drugs
- folic acid
- aspirin
- To be given to everyone over the age of 55
- Wald Law (2003) claim it could reduce
cardiovascular disease by 80 - It has been a controversial proposal but at
the very least - shows how the role of
preventative medicine could become more important
in the future
52The ageing process
Medical advances
- It is generally considered that ageing is a
by-product of the evolutionary process - However, gerontologists have differing views on
the potential of medicine to arrest the ageing
process - Some believe that human longevity could be
extended dramatically in the 21st Century
the possibilities of lengthening life appear
practically unlimited
Regelson (1996)
the only practical limit to human life span is
the limit of human technology
Rose (1996)
the cure for ageingis no longer science
fiction
de Grey (2003)
53Developments in anti-ageing research
Medical advances
- Telomerase
- Enzyme used to make human cells replicate
indefinitely in vitro - Gerentogenes
- Genes linked to longevity have been manipulated
in experiments with animals - Hormone Therapies
- Hormones such as D.H.E.A. have been linked to
ageing - Caloric restriction
- Animal experimentation has shown a link between
a diet low in calories and increased lifespan.
An ingredient of red wine resveratol seems to
mimic the age-enhancing effects of caloric
restriction.
54Longevity in the 21st Century
- Background
- 20th Century Trends
- International Experience
- Medical Advances
- The Threat From Infectious Diseases
- Projecting the Future
- Implications
55Infectious diseases are a growing threat
Infectious diseases
- Rapid global transport, especially air travel
(e.g. SARS) - Increasing use of antibacterials in medicine
veterinary science - Potential advances in xenotransplantation
- Increasing industrialisation of food production
- Human behaviour (unprotected sex and drug use)
- Potential threat of bioterrorism
56Examples of newly-recognised infectious diseases
Infectious diseases
Year Microbe Disease
1977 Ebola virus Ebola haemmorrhagic fever
1977 Legionella pneumophilia Legionnaires disease
1983 HIV AIDS
1996 TSE causing agent New variant CJD
2003 SARS-CoV SARS
57Newly reported HIV infections and HIV-related
deaths in the UK, 1987-2002
Infectious diseases
Source PHLS, HPA
58Reported cases of MRSA in the UK, 1992-2002
Infectious diseases
Source HPA
59General points
Infectious diseases
- Advances in medicine and international
networking will continue to help limit the
effects of new diseases (SARS is a good example) - Arguably HIV is the only infectious agent to
emerge in recent decades to have a dramatic
impact on global mortality. - HIV remains a threat to health and mortality as
well as the global economy - The potential threat of infectious diseases
cannot be disregarded - As deaths from heart disease and cancer reduce
in future decades the relative impact of deaths
from infectious diseases may become more
significant
60Longevity in the 21st Century
- Background
- 20th Century Trends
- International Experience
- Medical Advances
- The Threat From Infectious Diseases
- Projecting the Future
- Implications
61In the first few decades of the 21st Century it
is likely that mortality rates for elderly people
in the UK will improve at faster pace than ever
before
Projecting the future
- Projection of the UK cohort effect
- Past patterns of smoking prevalence
- A general ageing of mortality improvement
- Accelerating medical advances
- Rapid improvements in heart disease mortality
- Potential for improvement at older ages is
greatest
62Methods of mortality projection
Projecting the future
There will be a much greater focus on quantifying
the uncertainty around future projections
63Significance of mortality assumptions
Projecting the future
Annuity costs for a male retiring at age 65 in
2004 derived using a 5.0 interest rate
Mortality basis Cost relative to PMA92u2004
PMA92u2004 the FSA pension projection basis -
PMA92mc the medium cohort basis 8
Benchmark A based on the assumption that improvements continue at their current pace 13
64Significance of mortality assumptions
Projecting the future
Pension costs for a male retiring at age 65 in
2019 derived using a 2.5 interest rate
Mortality basis Cost relative to PA(90)-2
PA(90)-2 the Minimum Funding Requirement basis -
PMA92c2020 21
PMA92mc the medium cohort basis 34
Benchmark A based on the assumption that improvements continue at their current pace 49
65Longevity in the 21st Century
- Background
- 20th Century Trends
- International Experience
- Medical Advances
- The Threat From Infectious Diseases
- Projecting the Future
- Implications
66General
Implications
- Likely future trends in mortality will have a
profound impact on all aspects of our society - Inevitably people will remain in work for longer
Ten years ago, global ageing barely registered
as a policy issue. Today it is the focus of
growing concern among political and policy
leaders worldwide.
Center for Strategic and International Studies
(2003)
67For life assurance companies
Implications
- Losses being declared on existing annuity books
- Increased reserves for GAOs
- Increased capital requirements (partially driven
by new FSA regulations) - Increased focus on mortality issues from equity
analysts and ratings agencies - Development of alternative annuity products and
use of additional rating factors
Taken together these factors may lead to the
continued worsening of annuity rates
68For final salary pension schemes
Implications
- Increasing pressure (not least from equity
analysts) to disclose mortality assumptions - Pressure to move towards more flexible
definitions of retirement age - Increased buyout costs as closed schemes mature
and FSA regulations require insurers to consider
a greater range of adverse scenarios in setting
capital requirements
69For the Actuarial Profession
Implications
- Increasing realisation that we have much to
learn from demographers, epidemiologists,
gerontologists, etc - Increasing realisation that we need to play our
part in the wider debate
70Longevity in the 21st Century