Global Study Reveals Rising Gap Between Lifespan and Healthy Years
New research highlights a growing disparity as people live longer but face more years of chronic illness, with the U.S. leading in healthspan-lifespan divide.
- A Mayo Clinic study using WHO data from 183 countries found that the global healthspan-lifespan gap increased by 13% from 2000 to 2019, reaching an average of 9.6 years.
- The U.S. has the largest healthspan-lifespan gap globally, with Americans living an average of 12.4 years in poor health, a nearly 30% higher gap than the global average.
- Chronic conditions such as mental health disorders, substance use, and musculoskeletal diseases are major contributors to the U.S. health burden, particularly for women.
- Globally, women experience a 2.4-year larger health gap than men, driven by conditions like neurological, musculoskeletal, and urogenital disorders.
- Researchers emphasize the need for wellness-focused healthcare systems and targeted interventions to address region-specific contributors to the growing healthspan-lifespan disparity.