The question of the human mortality plateau: Contrasting insights by longevity pioneers

Archive ouverte

Dang, Linh Hoang Khanh | Camarda, Carlo Giovanni | Meslé, France | Ouellette, Nadine | Robine, Jean-Marie | Vallin, Jacques

Edité par CCSD ; Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research -

International audience. Background: The debate about limits to the human life span is often based on outcomes from mortality at the oldest ages among longevity pioneers. To this day, scholars disagree on the existence of a late-life plateau in human mortality. Amid various statistical analysis frameworks, the parametric proportional hazards model is a simple and valuable approach to test the presence of a plateau by assuming different baseline hazard functions on individual-level data.Objective: We replicate and propose some improvements to the methods of Barbi et al. (2018) to explore whether death rates reach a plateau at later ages in the French population as it does for Italians in the original study.Methods: We use a large set of exceptionally reliable data covering the most recently extinct birth cohorts, 1883–1901, where all 3,789 members who were born and died in France, were followed from age 105 onward. Individual life trajectories are modeled by a proportional hazards model with fixed covariates (gender, birth cohort) and a Gompertz baseline hazard function.Results: In contrast with Barbi et al. (2018)’s results, our Gompertz slope parameter estimate is statistically different from zero across all model specifications, suggesting death rates continue to increase beyond 105 years old in the French population. In addition, we find no significant birth cohort effect but a significant male disadvantage in mortality after age 105.Conclusions: Using the best data currently available, we did not find any evidence of a mortality plateau in French individuals aged 105 and older.Contribution: The evidence for the existence of an extreme-age mortality plateau in recent Italian cohorts does not extend to recent French cohorts. Caution in generalizations is advised, and we encourage further studies on long-lived populations with high-quality data.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Mortality Modelling at the Oldest Ages in Human Populations. Mortality Modelling at the Oldest Ages in Human Populations: A brief overview

Archive ouverte | Dang, Linh Hoang Khanh | CCSD

Population aging is a widening demographic phenomenon in many developed countries, with the numbers of survivors above age 90 growing at steady rates. It is the source of many challenges to society. Among key factors to understand...

Trajectoire des taux de mortalité aux âges extrêmes de la vie. Trajectoire des taux de mortalité aux âges extrêmes de la vie: Une représentation paramétrique des données récentes de la France, de la Belgique et du Québec

Archive ouverte | Dang, Linh Hoang Khanh | CCSD

Throughout adult lifespan, age-specific death rates increase at a pace which is very close to an exponential pace as depicted by the Gompertz model. At very old ages, however, changes in the risk of death remain a matter of debate...

Survival analysis on mortality data at oldest ages: First results on longevity pioneers in France

Archive ouverte | Dang, Linh Hoang Khanh | CCSD

International audience. Studying mortality at extreme old ages has been very challenging, mostly because data of good quality are sparse. Decades of hard work of many research teams offered a new type of data on dea...

Chargement des enrichissements...