Japanese Life Expectancy Declines For First Time In Decade Due To COVID-19

Japanese Life Expectancy Declines For First Time In Decade Due To COVID-19

TOKYO, Jul 30 (NNN-NHK) – The average life expectancy of Japanese women and men decreased for the first time in a decade, as the country struggled with the COVID-19 pandemic, health ministry’s statistics showed yesterday.

The average life span for Japanese women is 87.57 years, down by 0.14 year, compared to a year earlier, while that of men was 81.47 years, down by 0.09 year, according to the health ministry.

It is the first time the figure has declined since 2011, when a massive earthquake and tsunami in north-eastern Japan caused meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear complex, leaving more than 15,000 dead and many more unaccounted for.

According to the health ministry, the fall in the average life span was caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. “COVID-19 was behind the decline for most men,” a ministry official said.

About 16,000 people in Japan died of COVID-19 in 2021, according to the health ministry.

Despite the decline, 88.3 percent of Japanese women, who were born in 2021, are expected to live until 75 years old, while that of men born last year, is predicted to be 76.0 percent, according to the health ministry’s estimate.

The ministry also said 52.0 percent of women who were born in 2021, are likely to live until the age of 90, while the corresponding percentage of men will likely be 27.5 percent.

Average life expectancy is the average length of time a person at birth is expected to live, assuming that the death rate in a year does not change.– NNN-NHK  

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