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by LifeExpectancy
3316 days ago
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I was just a reader so far but I had to register now.
As someone who works full-time in this field:
- You are right about the definition of life expectancy.
- I have never ever heard this definition of longevity. It is sometimes used as a synonym for life expectancy.
- No one dies of old age. |
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I'm fairly stunned if you work in this field that you wouldn't have heard of the concept of longevity, or at least maximum lifespan, as something distinct and opposed to life expectancy. It's quite important to rule out accidental causes of death if you want to have any chance of understanding how long humans can possibly live. Being able to make statements about diet and exercise requires being able to factor out all car and sports accidents from the average.
Here's what Wikipedia says: "Longevity, maximum lifespan, and life expectancy are not synonyms. Life expectancy is defined statistically as the mean number of years remaining for an individual or a group of people at a given age. Longevity refers to the characteristics of the relatively long life span of some members of a population. Maximum lifespan is the age at death for the longest-lived individual of a species. Moreover, because life expectancy is an average, a particular person may die many years before or many years after the "expected" survival. The term "maximum life span" has a quite different meaning and is more related to longevity."
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_expectancy
To be fair, the Longevity entry echoes what you said, that some people use it as a synonym.
My hope was that the NIH would be more careful, because they're scientists working in the field, and they know better than to use vague terms that have easily misunderstood meanings.
> No one dies of old age.
True, but you know exactly what I mean, right? Whatever you want to call it, natural causes? Ideal conditions? What is the correct term for people who grow old and don't die of an accident?