Previous research found evidence for a transition from mortality compression (declining lifespan variability) to mortality delay (increasing ages at death) in low-mortality countries. We specifically assessed the year at which increases in life expectancy at birth transitioned from being predominantly due to mortality compression to being predominantly due to mortality delay in 26 European countries, Japan, and the United States of America (USA), 1950–2014. To unsmoothed age- and sex-specific death rates from the Human Mortality Database, we applied the CoDe (compression and delay) mortality model. Among women, the transition first occurred in the USA around 1950, then in North-Western Europe (1955–1970) and Southern Europe (1970–1975), and...
In the most advanced countries, child mortality and adult mortality under age 65 years have fallen s...
Kannisto (2001) has shown that as the frequency distribution of ages at death has shifted to the rig...
Life expectancy at birth has roughly tripled over the course of human history. Early gains were due ...
BACKGROUND: A decrease in mortality across all ages causes a shift of the age pattern of mortality, ...
The human mortality experience has changed fundamentally as a result of the mortality transition. N...
Background Although mortality delay (the shift of the age-at-death distribution to older ages) and m...
<b>Background</b>: In most developed countries, mortality reductions in the first half of the 20th c...
With the fall of mortality, the frequency distribution of ages at death has been shifting towards ol...
The rapid increase in human longevity has raised important questions about what implications this de...
Background: There is growing empirical evidence supporting theories of developmental origins of heal...
Improvements in life expectancy have been considerable over the past hundred years. Forecasters have...
<div><p>Improvements in life expectancy have been considerable over the past hundred years. Forecast...
The life expectancy development during the past 150 years has been remarkable in many parts of the w...
Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) have experienced considerable instability in mortality since the 19...
BACKGROUND. The male–female life expectancy gap is increasingly driven by mortality differences at o...
In the most advanced countries, child mortality and adult mortality under age 65 years have fallen s...
Kannisto (2001) has shown that as the frequency distribution of ages at death has shifted to the rig...
Life expectancy at birth has roughly tripled over the course of human history. Early gains were due ...
BACKGROUND: A decrease in mortality across all ages causes a shift of the age pattern of mortality, ...
The human mortality experience has changed fundamentally as a result of the mortality transition. N...
Background Although mortality delay (the shift of the age-at-death distribution to older ages) and m...
<b>Background</b>: In most developed countries, mortality reductions in the first half of the 20th c...
With the fall of mortality, the frequency distribution of ages at death has been shifting towards ol...
The rapid increase in human longevity has raised important questions about what implications this de...
Background: There is growing empirical evidence supporting theories of developmental origins of heal...
Improvements in life expectancy have been considerable over the past hundred years. Forecasters have...
<div><p>Improvements in life expectancy have been considerable over the past hundred years. Forecast...
The life expectancy development during the past 150 years has been remarkable in many parts of the w...
Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) have experienced considerable instability in mortality since the 19...
BACKGROUND. The male–female life expectancy gap is increasingly driven by mortality differences at o...
In the most advanced countries, child mortality and adult mortality under age 65 years have fallen s...
Kannisto (2001) has shown that as the frequency distribution of ages at death has shifted to the rig...
Life expectancy at birth has roughly tripled over the course of human history. Early gains were due ...