Global Trends
Cross-source consensus on Global Trends from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
How it works
Comparisons
Background
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- Most countries in the dataset showed growth in the observed lifespan differential around 1960-1980 followed by stagnation or decline around 1990-2014. — Observed lifespan differential - global trends, policy impact and computational methods
- The reversal implies that male observed lifespan growth later matched or surpassed female observed lifespan growth. — Observed lifespan differential - global trends, policy impact and computational methods
- The study describes the trend reversal as almost universal but does not rigorously prove universality. — Observed lifespan differential - global trends, policy impact and computational methods
- Japan, Norway, and Slovakia are noted as exceptions that did not clearly move away from growth. — Observed lifespan differential - global trends, policy impact and computational methods
- Iceland differed from both the dominant reversal pattern and continued-growth cases by showing a persistent downward trend despite fluctuations. — Observed lifespan differential - global trends, policy impact and computational methods