Healthy life expectancy gap between rich and poor has widened, study finds
The think tank's new analysis suggests that differences in healthy years lived between affluent and deprived areas have widened. It also concludes that the UK has the second-lowest healthy life expectancy of high-income countries, which includes those in western Europe, the Nordics, North America and Oceania.
This had created "a significant economic cost, with poor health driving people out of the workforce and locking young people out of education, employment and training", he added.
The authors argued that looking back over a decade revealed a trend that can be explained by many factors - including poor housing, obesity and the effects of deprivation - as well as the Covid pandemic.
2 years on average and 14. 4 years of ill health, while women had a predicted average of 68. 5 years of good health and 17.
But in the most deprived areas it was just 49.
8 healthy years and 23. 4 in poor health for men, and 48. 2 years of healthy life expectancy and 30. 1 in ill health for women.
Only the United States has a lower average number
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