Mortality at the highest ages
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of the Institute of Actuaries
- Vol. 114 (2) , 327-338
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020268100019089
Abstract
The pattern of mortality at the highest ages has been considered by many authors, including Redington (1969), Humphrey (1970) and Benjamin (1964, 1982). The questions raised have included the following:(a) Is there a definite upper limit to the span of human life, so that qx reaches unity at a finite age? Or does qx tend gradually to unity as age tends to infinity, as happens under the Gompertz and Makeham laws? Or does qx tend to a constant less than unity, as under the Perks formula or the formula which was used to graduate the English Life Tables No. 11 and 12?(b) Has the fall in mortality rates at lower ages been accompanied by a similar fall at the very highest ages? Has the upper tail of the curve of death (μxlx) shifted?(c) Does the lower mortality of females compared with males extend to the very highest ages, or do the rates eventually tend to converge?Keywords
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- La mortalite des vieillardsPopulation, 1951