COVID-19 shrinks life expectancy in S.Korea for first time since 1970
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[December 01, 2023]
By Hyonhee Shin
SEOUL (Reuters) - Babies born in South Korea last year are expected to
live 82.7 years, down from 83.6 years in 2021, the statistics agency
said on Friday, after life expectancy fell in 2022 for the first time
since 1970, hit by a spike in deaths linked to COVID-19.
Following a global trend of such declines over the past few years, the
OECD grouping said last month that average life expectancy had dipped
0.7 years across its 39 member nations between 2019 and 2021.
COVID-19 caused 7% of all deaths in 2021, and life expectancy remains
below pre-pandemic levels in 28 countries, it added.
Although South Korea's life expectancy still ranks among the world's
highest after sharp improvements in recent decades, it also suffered
from COVID.
"The number of COVID deaths increased sharply in 2022 and they ranked
third among the causes of death," Lim Young-il, an official of the
agency, Statistics Korea, told a briefing.
In the absence of the coronavirus, life expectancy would have increased
by 0.1 year rather than having fallen 0.9 years, Lim added. South Korea
began tracking the data in 1970.
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People pose for photographs on a sunny spring day amid the
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic at a Han river park in
Seoul, South Korea, April 19, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File photo
Neighboring Japan has also seen its
life expectancy fall for two consecutive years, with the pandemic
cutting lifespans by 0.62 years for women and 0.51 years for men
over the two years, to stand at 87.09 years and 81.05, respectively.
However, life expectancy figures have recovered in some countries,
such as the United States, where they rose by roughly a year in 2022
after two straight years of decline.
South Korea managed to rein in COVID-19 deaths at the start of the
pandemic before a sharp uptick in 2022, when the statistics agency
recorded more than 370,000 deaths from the coronavirus.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin and Soo-hyang Choi; Additional reporting
by John Mair in Sydney and Rocky Swift in Tokyo; Editing by Ed
Davies and Clarence Fernandez)
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