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The Healthy Life Expectancy of Southeast Asian Nations

The Healthy Life Expectancy of Southeast Asian Nations
Photo by Mārtiņš Zemlickis on Unsplash

The World Health Organization's database on healthy life expectancy revealed recently indicated how many years a newborn can expect to have a full, healthy life.

According to The Jakarta Post, Indonesia's healthy life expectancy (HALE) at birth has steadily risen since 2000, but the 2016 figures showed that this was not good enough  at least compared to the global average.

It also shows that Indonesia's HALE average stands at 61.7 years, with women having a longer expectancy at 63 years compared to men at 60.4 years. The global average is 63.3 years for both sexes  64.8 for women and 62 years for men.

Keterangan Gambar (© Pemilik Gambar)

Compared to neighboring Southeast Asian countries, Indonesia is only ahead of Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia, while on par with the Philippines.

Singapore tops the HALE list in the region by a significant margin. The average Singaporean born in 2016 can expect to live 76.2 years of full health, while the average person in Brunei Darussalam can expect 67.9 years.

Keterangan Gambar (© Pemilik Gambar)

The wealthy city-state is also the ranked first in the world, followed by Japan at 74.8 years, Spain at 73.8 years, Switzerland at 73.5 years and France at 73.4 years.

At the bottom five are the Central African Republic, Lesotho, Chad, Sierra Leone and Côte d’Ivoire. All these countries have an average healthy life expectancy of less than 50 years.

One highlight from the report is that newborns in China can now expect a longer healthy life at 68.7 years, compared to those born in United States at 68.5 years, as reported by China Daily. The margin is slim, but the US’ healthy life expectancy at birth had been steadily falling since 2010, the WHO’s records show.

In summary, herewith the extraction of the average age in each nations in the region, as ranked by the WHO report:

Keterangan Gambar (© Pemilik Gambar)


Source : The Jakarta Post & WHO Official Website

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