AS FORECASTS go, it’s not the most cheerful variety, but the latest prediction of the most prominent causes of death and disease a quarter of a century from now isn’t all doom and gloom.
The World 91ɫƬ Organization has compiled its most comprehensive analysis yet of what people will suffer and die from in 2030, and the good news is that globally, the risk of dying before the age of 5 could be halved by then. More darkly, twice as many people will die from AIDS as now, and cigarettes will kill half as many again as at present, accounting for a tenth of all the world’s deaths in 2030. Depression will be second only to AIDS as a cause of debilitating illness.
“We’re not saying this is definitely what will happen,” says Colin Mathers of the WHO in Geneva, who led the study. “But health officials should have the best idea we can arrive at now of what seems likely to happen, so they can prepare.”
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So how good is the prediction? The WHO made its first long-range prediction of global health in 1996, but there have already been more cases of AIDS and fewer of tuberculosis than predicted. Mathers admits that the current study, published online in PLoS Medicine (vol 3, e442) is potentially prone to similar errors. The wild cards this time are evolving infectious diseases such as flu.
To make their predictions as accurate as possible, the team included a much larger set of up-to-date death and illness statistics than were available in 1996. They then modelled how those incidences will change, based partly on how the population is expected to grow and age over coming decades, and on trends in obesity and smoking.
However, the key factor is growing prosperity, says Mathers. As countries get richer, they can afford the hygiene and vaccination measures that wipe out diseases of poverty, mainly infectious diseases. “People die of heart disease when they’re 70 instead of diarrhoea when they’re 3.” he says.
“As countries get richer, they can afford the hygiene and vaccination measures that wipe out diseases of poverty”
The team therefore factored in the World Bank’s predictions of economic growth. The outlook is optimistic for Africa, where growth is forecast at 2 per cent per year, as opposed to the 0.5 per cent achieved in the 1990s. But if growth here is much slower – perhaps due to a large economic impact of AIDS – the WHO’s hopeful prediction of a “dramatic” shift in death from infancy to old age may not materialise.
AIDS deaths are predicted to soar from 2.8 million in 2002 to 6.5 million worldwide. Yet that figure still won’t overtake tobacco-related deaths, which will mushroom from 5.4 million in 2005 to 8.3 million – accounting for 1 in 10 deaths globally.
That said, the new projection’s two leading causes of death globally are the same as in the 1996 forecast: heart attack and stroke. And just as then, pneumonia, HIV and pulmonary diseases such as emphysema make up the rest of the top five.
Meanwhile, the leading causes of debilitating illness will be AIDS, depression and heart attack – unless prosperity really soars, and road accidents edge out heart attack as more people can afford to drive.
