In communicating chronic risks, there is increasing use of a metaphor that can be termed ‘effective-age’: the age of a ‘healthy’ person who has the same risk profile as the individual in question. Popular measures include ‘real-age’, ‘heart-age’, ‘lung-age’ and so on. Here we formally define this concept, and illustrate its use in a variety of areas. We explore conditions under which the years lost or gained that are associated with exposure to risk factors depends neither on current chronological age, nor the period over which the risk is defined. These conditions generally hold for all-cause adult mortality, which enables a simple and vivid translation from hazard-ratios to years lost or gained off chronological age. Finally we consider ...
[[abstract]]For facilitating risk communication in clinical management, such a ratio-based measure b...
The World Health Organization’s (WHO) active aging framework recognizes that age barriers and ageism...
At the beginning of the 21st century, the new mantra—“successful ” and “resourceful ” aging—is used ...
Background. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention guidelines are generally based on the absolute r...
Objectives : A young person with many risk factors may have the same level of risk as an older perso...
Background: National estimates of 'heart age' by government health organisations in the US, UK and C...
Age studies scholars have long noted problems with using a tsunami metaphor to describe population a...
Medicine-related research includes numerous studies on the hazards of mortality and what risk factor...
In this paper, I present an emerging explanatory framework about ageing and care. In particular, I f...
Across adulthood, people face increasingly more risky medical problems and decisions. However, littl...
Increasing longevity can distort time trends in summary measures of health and mortality, such as th...
Cardiovascular risk scores predict an individual’s risk of developing cardiovascular disease. Many w...
Increasing longevity can distort time trends in summary measures of health and mortality, such as th...
<div><p>Increasing longevity can distort time trends in summary measures of health and mortality, su...
Objective: to determine older people's understanding of probability and risk information, and the im...
[[abstract]]For facilitating risk communication in clinical management, such a ratio-based measure b...
The World Health Organization’s (WHO) active aging framework recognizes that age barriers and ageism...
At the beginning of the 21st century, the new mantra—“successful ” and “resourceful ” aging—is used ...
Background. Cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention guidelines are generally based on the absolute r...
Objectives : A young person with many risk factors may have the same level of risk as an older perso...
Background: National estimates of 'heart age' by government health organisations in the US, UK and C...
Age studies scholars have long noted problems with using a tsunami metaphor to describe population a...
Medicine-related research includes numerous studies on the hazards of mortality and what risk factor...
In this paper, I present an emerging explanatory framework about ageing and care. In particular, I f...
Across adulthood, people face increasingly more risky medical problems and decisions. However, littl...
Increasing longevity can distort time trends in summary measures of health and mortality, such as th...
Cardiovascular risk scores predict an individual’s risk of developing cardiovascular disease. Many w...
Increasing longevity can distort time trends in summary measures of health and mortality, such as th...
<div><p>Increasing longevity can distort time trends in summary measures of health and mortality, su...
Objective: to determine older people's understanding of probability and risk information, and the im...
[[abstract]]For facilitating risk communication in clinical management, such a ratio-based measure b...
The World Health Organization’s (WHO) active aging framework recognizes that age barriers and ageism...
At the beginning of the 21st century, the new mantra—“successful ” and “resourceful ” aging—is used ...