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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper examines the newspaper article "How old can we go?" by McClatchy published in 2006. The author contends that there is a popular notion that Americans are often living beyond the age of 100 but that life expectancy today is about 75 for males and 80 for females. The debate on life expectancy calculation is explored. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: RT13_SA722age.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
contends that there is a popular notion that Americans are often living beyond the age of 100 (McClatchy, 2006). The idea that this is possible is accentuated by media. For
example, the Today show often celebrates anytime someone reaches the age of 100. Of course, the highlighting of such an event should be a clue that people often do not
attain that age rather easily. It is a milestone. McClatchy (2006) focuses on one study that suggests that life expectancy today is about 75 for males and 80 for females.
This is a far lower number than the desirable 100 year goal. In fact, according to this study, most people will only live about three quarters of that goal. In
exploring demographics, the author explains that diseases such as Typhoid no longer kills the young, so this can explain why death rates had gone down considerably (McClatchy, 2006). In other
words, the statistical methodology used to discern the fact that life expectancy is rising is based on better medicine, but it does not mean that the human body has changed
much. It is just that if the birth and death rates are compared, and fewer people die from incurable diseases, those individuals skew the results. The author explains: " Remove
those factors and researchers find that U.S. life expectancy continues to climb, but by no more than a couple of months annually" (McClatchy, 2006). The author suggests that despite some
health advocates who claim people can live well past 100, experts feel that human beings are approaching a biological ceiling on old age (McClatchy, 2006). This article is interesting. It
is perhaps a myth that as time progresses, people are living longer. It is true that there are more diseases conquered and individuals can live beyond the expectancy of the
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