Jakarta Globe – AFP, Sep 12, 2014
Jakarta. The number of people aged 100 or older in rapidly greying Japan has hit a record high for the 44th straight year, the government said on Friday.
Jakarta. The number of people aged 100 or older in rapidly greying Japan has hit a record high for the 44th straight year, the government said on Friday.
The
country’s centenarian population jumped by 4,423 from a year earlier to a
record 58,820 as of Sept. 1, the health ministry said, adding that 87.1 percent
of them were women.
On average,
there are 46.21 centenarians per 100,000 people.
The figures
included the world’s oldest woman and her male counterpart, as recognized by
Guinness World Records — Misao Okawa, a 116-year-old woman in Osaka, and Sakari
Momoi, the oldest known man at 111.
The number
of centenarians stood at just 153 when the ministry started the survey in 1963.
It topped 10,000 in 1998 and has increased by 3,000 to 4,000 each year
recently.
“Progress
in medical technology and an improvement in the care-giving system may have
contributed to the steady rise,” said ministry official Yuji Umemoto.
In 2013,
life expectancy for women in Japan was 86.61, the longest in the world, while
for men it was 80.21, the fourth longest, the ministry said earlier.eld
Agence France-Presse
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