When lifespan were shorter, people can use their time, energy and resources to have and raising children instead of spending it all for taking care of our parents. That way we can have demographic dividen
Even when some choose not to have any children, they will not burdening society for too long. Infections tend to end lives faster than degenerative diseases.
Well maybe there are some benefits in long living, but long dying is definitely a curse.
And the young (millenials) don't necessarily have the advantage. The younger generation is, on the whole, more overweight than my generation was at that age.
Is this good, bad or big brother? All of the above. I'm genetically blessed and proactive enough to usually deliver decent numbers. It's nice -- if that's the right word -- to know my basic stats once a year. And...I'm not so keen on my employer having direct access to my medical info.
A week or two ago, I read in national news that some employers collect data on their employees via "corporate wellness programs." My first (and last) reaction was DUH. This is news??? Seems pretty obvious to me.
And I doubt my grandmother was the only one nursing her loved one through a decade of physical and mental decline back in the 1960's. (Although as a young child I was, of course, oblivious to it)
I wasn't surprised seeing relatives going back to the late 1700's had passed at 60-70, but was surprised how many lived into their 80's and 90's.
In my opinion, medical treatment should use to restore health, not merely to keep the heart beating and the lungs breathing.
Nowadays my great grandfather would be airlifted to the trauma unit after the tree he was cutting down fell on him instead of lingering on for a day or two, was it better that he left this earth when he did? My mom's little brother would have never died from pneumonia before his 2nd birthday, a complication of one of those childhood diseases we routinely vaccinate for today. The modern conundrum, of course, is dealing with those with profound mental or bodily disabilities who linger on for years and decades. The answer, I think, is for society to find ways to share the burden, although admittedly right now that seems a utopian dream.