Life - Articles - Highest and lowest male and female life expectancy


ONS data on life expectancy for local areas across the UK reveals that men and women have the longest life expectancy in Hart and Kensington & Chelsea respectively, with Blackpool (men) and Blaenau Gwent (women) the local areas with the lowest life expectancy.

 Male life expectancy has a gap of 10.3 years between Hart (83.7 years) and Blackpool (73.4 years), while the gap for women is 7.5 years between Kensington & Chelsea (86.3 years) and Blaenau Gwent (78.9 years) sharp regional disparities in longevity within the separate nations and regions.

 In all English regions, Northern Ireland and Wales, life expectancy at birth in 2020 to 2022 was lower than in 2017 to 2019, as the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic led to increased mortality in 2020 and 2021. These are 'period' life expectancy figures that look at past mortality experience and not projections of future likely life expectancy numbers.

 Stephen Lowe, group communications director at retirement specialist Just Group, commented: “The ONS data reveals the sharp geographic variations in life expectancy at birth throughout the UK. Of the ten local areas with the highest life expectancy, all 10 were in the South for females and nine were for men.

 “It demonstrates the importance on our health of the communities and socio-economic circumstances of where people grow up and live from education and housing through to working conditions. People living in wealthier areas are more likely to live longer lives with key risk factors like smoking and obesity typically higher among more deprived demographics.

 “It's important that individuals don't fixate on average life expectancy figures for retirement planning because the range of possible outcomes are so wide and the longer you live, the longer you are expected to live. Retirees must prepare for living long lives, living to around average age, or dying sooner. All three are realistic possibilities that need to be covered when retirement planning."

 https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/life-expectancy-for-local-areas-of-the-uk-between-2001-to-2003-and-2020-to-2022--2
  

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

1 in 10 forget to remove their ex as their beneficiary
One in 10 divorcees have forgotten to remove their former spouse as the beneficiary of their life insurance policy (10%). Only 7% of people who divorc
FCA launches study on pure protection market providing value
The FCA has launched a market study into how well the distribution of pure protection insurance products – which support families with financial commi
Comment on FCA study of protection products to consumers
The FCA launched a new market study into distribution of pure protection products to retail consumers to discover if competition is working in the int

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.