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Medicine at the Extremes of Life

Health and the Seven Ages of Man: Serious Ill Health in the Very Old and the Very Young. Shakespeare defined seven ages of man, and in his time death was no stranger in all of these groups; Shakespeare died in his early 50's.

Economic development and modern medicine have gradually squeezed life-threatening conditions to the extremes of life: the mewing infant in the developing world, and the seventh age in the developed world increasingly are where death and serious illness are concentrated.

Even in the last 15 years, the average age of onset of much life-changing illness in the UK has gone up significantly, and the average age of global childhood deaths has gone down with over 40% of under 5 year old deaths now in the first 28 days of life.

The lecture will explore why this reduction in deaths and serious disease in the period from early childhood to late old age has happened, and provide an initial exploration of what we can learn for future improvements.
(from gresham.ac.uk)

1. Health and the Seven Ages of Man: Serious Ill Health in the Very Old and the Very Young


Go to the Series Home or watch other lectures:

1. Health and the Seven Ages of Man: Serious Ill Health in the Very Old and the Very Young
2. The Shape of Things to Come: Future Demography around the World
3. Suffer the Little Children: The Gradual Improvement in Child Health has Left Newborns Behind
4. Keeping the Heart Young in an Old Body
5. Stroke in the Elderly: Slowly Retreating
6. Dementia: At Risk of Being Forgotten?