How To Improve Your Average Longevity

Published: 28th April 2010
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Longevity is the number of years of existence as jointly determined by heredity or genetics and some environmental factors. There are two different types of longevity; average longevity and maximum longevity.

Average longevity - is commonly known as average life expectancy which refers to the age wherein half of the persons who were born in a specific year could have died. Maximum longevity is the oldest age in which any person lives. Average longevity is affected by both heredity or genetics and environmental factors.

Average life expectancy - also means life span. This differs with the degree of resistance against diseases, accidents, homicide or suicide. This is calculated for people at any age. With few exceptions, 30,000 days is the average life expectancy - 40,000 days if you are fortunate. Though, 2,000 years ago, the average human life span was less than twenty years or about 7,000 days.

Bacteria, accidents, predators, changes in weather and insufficient supply of dependable food source were the causes of short, dirty and vicious existences. This is so, if people survived birth. Infant death rates ranged from 300 or 400 per 1,000 live births in the eighteenth century, while there are only 7 deaths per 1,000 live births today.

Japan has the longest average longevity of 80 years, as reported by government figures. Likewise, in the United States, a baby who was born these days can anticipate to live up to 77 years. Fascinatingly these numbers keep on rising not only to those developed countries but all throughout the world.

Some environmental factors that affect average longevity:

1. Diseases like cardiovascular diseases and Alzheimer's disease

2. Your "way of life" which involves smoking or physical activity

3. Toxins - environmental pollutants encountered primarily like air and water pollutants are continuing dilemmas. Poisons in fish, bacteria and carcinogenic chemicals in drinking water and airborne contaminants are major causes in shortening life span.

4. Social class - the impact of social class in life expectancy is the outcome of reduced access to goods and services especially medical care that describes most tribal minority groups, the poor and many adults.

The depressing part regarding most environmental factors is that people are responsible for them. Denying sufficient care to everyone continues to contaminate our environment, failing to attend the essential causes of poverty have indisputable consequences. They needlessly cut down lives and significantly increase the charge of health care.

Significant factors affecting life expectancy are: gender, genetics, access to health care, hygiene, diet and nutrition, exercises, lifestyle and crime rates. Recent inclination on the rates in lifestyle diseases, like obesity, diabetes, hypertension and heart diseases may radically slow down or reverse the tendency toward increasing life span in the developed universe.

Arguments having a tendency to favor socio-environmental factors also has effects on life expectancy; men who consumed more alcohol, tobacco and drugs than women in most societies are more likely to die from plenty of associated illnesses like lung cancer, tuberculosis and cirrhosis of the liver.

Men are more susceptible to die from injuries, whether unintentional (like car accidents) or intentional (suicide, violence or war). Men are also at risk to die due to most primary causes of deaths in the U. S. which include: cancer of respiratory system, accidents caused by motor vehicles, suicide, liver cirrhosis, coronary heart diseases and emphysema.

Based on socio-environmental effects on mortality, women still have prolonged life expectancy. This genetic difference happens since women have more resistance to sickness and other degenerative illnesses.

To improve average longevity, some of the ways to follow are:

1. Diet and nutrition - eating the right and nutritious food will help improve life span. Diseases like diabetes, heart diseases, hypertension, obesity and others can be avoided by taking balanced and nutritious foods.

2. Exercises - doing physical activities regularly, help people in lowering their weight and will get rid of related diseases because of weight.

3. Taking vitamins - it has been proven that taking good multivitamins will aid to add life span. Multivitamins act as fillers to the diet for nutrients and minerals that the body needs.

4. Lifestyle - by improving your way of living, like minimizing smoking, use of drugs and other vices.


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