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LIFE-SPAN IN AUSTRALIA

EXPECTANCY OF 65 YEARS SYDNEY December 28 In a study of greater longevity as it affects Australia, Mr. Vivian C. Crockett, director of the department of medical sociology of the New South Wales branch of the 8.M.A., stated in the British Medical Journal of Australia that “in ‘ypung’ Australia more than every third person is aged 40 years or more”—a higher percentage than in the United States. The cause, said Mr. Crockett, was not the falling birth-rate, but greater medical control of disease. Millions of ageing people, for instance, used to die from diabetes. Now they live to grow old with the aid of insulin. Fifty years ago, in Australia, the average child leaving schood at the age of 15 years had a further 34 years of life, dying at 49, but to-day, Mr Crockett said, the child still leaves school about the same age but he has a further 50 years of life, dying at 65. In 1881 the mean age in the Australian population wa's 20.8 years. At the latest census, 1933, it had increased to 27.69 years. The estimated Australian mean age to-day is around 29 i years—nearly. 10 years older than it was when Australians now in their fifties were born.

Mr. Crockett believes young unmarried women would be more valuable post-war immigrants to Australia than young unmarried men, who would only marry women who could, in an v case, have children by Australia’s excess marriageable males. Spouseless young women immigrants would later produce children additional to the normal increase of the population. There is a need, he added, to adopt a system for educating for an average 50 years of life after leavingschool. Average people, who now have 16 more years of life compared with 50 years ago, need education .that will encourage them to keep their minds agile by continuous exercise. From recent clinical studies it is now being contended that marked intolerance and conservation are neither normal nor inescapable attitues of old age. Society suggests to and expects from the elderly certain modes of feeling, and tends'.to be scandilised when they show "other feelings of behaviour. Yet there is often no psychological or biological necessity for old people to think differently from those in the prime of life. Nor are the old necessarily beyond education or acquisition of new mental interests.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GRA19440111.2.62

Bibliographic details

Grey River Argus, 11 January 1944, Page 6

Word Count
391

LIFE-SPAN IN AUSTRALIA Grey River Argus, 11 January 1944, Page 6

LIFE-SPAN IN AUSTRALIA Grey River Argus, 11 January 1944, Page 6