Å·ÃÀÈÕb´óƬ

Skip to Main Navigation
publicationSeptember 12, 2024

Unlocking the Power of Healthy Longevity: Demographic Change, Non-communicable Diseases, and Human Capital

Three areas of focus to help shape a healthier, equitable, more productive future: Play video


Synopsis

Healthy longevity means a state of good physical, cognitive, and social functioning throughout a person's lifespan. There is an opportunity to leverage population aging for health, societal, and economic gains by investing today in health and wellbeing across peoples¡¯ lives. This includes measures to control non-communicable diseases and their risk factors which contribute to a large and growing burden of avoidable mortality. Investing in healthy longevity could save 150 million lives in low- and middle- income countries and extend millions more by 2050, generating significant economic benefit.
Global aging is a triumph of development. Adults over 60 are the fastest-growing demographic across the world. This shift will impact labor, immigration, health care, social protection systems and economies. Rapidly aging societies need adaptable strategies with a special focus on marginalized groups, especially women, who often live longer with non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and chronic diseases and bear most caregiving responsibilities.
 
NCDs¡ªincluding cardiovascular disease, diabetes, respiratory disease, cancer, and some mental health conditions¡ªare responsible for at least 70 percent of deaths globally each year. The majority of these deaths occur in low-and middle-income countries.  Most of these deaths could be avoided by reducing major risk factors such as smoking, obesity and alcohol abuse. 
older african farming couple laugh together
 
There's an opportunity to leverage an aging population for health, societal, and economic gains. Investing in health and wellbeing throughout people¡¯s lives starting with maternal and child health to ongoing control of non-communicable diseases, is key to creating longer, healthier, productive lifespans.
 
The report ¡°¡± presents the findings and recommendations for life course investments to improve health, reduce poverty, address gender inequity, enhance productivity, and increase overall well-being. The report underscores the need for country-driven initiatives to invest in healthy longevity responding to demographic shifts, pandemic threats, and climate change.

What is the healthy longevity approach

 

    worldbank.org/healthylongevity

    • Older man and women in Benin laugh with their community
      Blog

    • healthy longevity cover illustration

    • healthy longevity at-a-glance
      2-Pager

    • Image
    • Image
    • Image
    • Image
    • Image
    • Image
    • Image
    • Image