Today I read a sentence that shocked me profoundly. It came from the website of the Office for National Statistics and it read:
‘Avoidable deaths accounted for 40.1% of all male deaths in the most deprived areas of England compared with 17.8% in the least deprived areas in 2020; for female deaths, it was 26.7% and 11.9%, respectively.’
These discrepancies are appalling. Our recent State of Ageing 2022 report showed how women in the wealthiest parts of the country are set to live 16 years longer in good health than those in the poorest. And these latest statistics confirm the wholly unfair reality that living in the most deprived areas means you are, to put it bluntly, less likely to live longer.
What I had not realised, and probably neither do many others, is that the figures relating to avoidable deaths do not include those aged over 75.
That keeps us in line with the OECD standard which has to take into account countries with lower life expectancies than ours. International comparability of data matters – we need to know how we match up to other countries – but it also risks sending a signal that, as a society, we are not concerned with why anyone over 75 dies and whether we could have done anything about it. It risks conveying that someone’s life is less valuable because on average they have fewer years ahead of them.