Article

Brief Review of World Demographic Trends - Trends in Age Distributions

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  • The Global Social Change Research Project
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Abstract

This report focuses on one demographic trend: Age Distributions. The basic findings of this report are: 1) in all regions, the largest group is the adults (15-59 years old), 2) in Asia, Africa, and Latin America and the Caribbean, there are more children than there are seniors, while, recently, in Europe there are more seniors than children, and in Northern America there will soon be more seniors than children, 3) in almost all regions, the proportion of the population who are children is declining while the proportion who are seniors is increasing. Sub-Saharan Africa is an exception. There are almost as many children as there are seniors, and the proportions of the population who are seniors and children have not yet changed.Changes in age distributions have many implications for society. For example, a larger proportion of younger people means more people who have yet to attain adulthood and who can be expected to have more children, which means continued population growth. So, Sub-Saharan Africa, which has the highest proportion of children, also has the highest population growth rates (as seen in previous reports), and can be expected to continue to have the highest population growth rates. Similarly, Europe and North America, which have the lowest proportion of children, also have the lowest population growth rates, which can be expected to continue to be low. Also, since most regions have declining proportions of children, most regions have declining population growth rates and will likely continue to have declining population growth rates.

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... The first is the data published by the WHO, which is updated every day and contains case, recovery, and death numbers for countries reporting all known COVID-19 cases (8). The second dataset is a global demographic database maintained by the United Nations (9). This database contains the number of individuals per year of age for more than 200 countries. ...
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A number of children live today both in high- and low-income settings, in rural areas that still do not guarantee a prompt, affordable, and appropriate access to a health system. It means that medical conditions ranging from very mild ones up to major emergencies cannot be dealt with locally and require the transportation of the child to a far hospital, losing time and wasting resources. The application of telemedicine systems able to reduce or annihilate the distances among the user and the provider of the health service is affordable and sustainable over time. The same models applicable for rural and extreme rural settings can be applied for an emergency scenario, humanitarian crisis, and natural catastrophes – where children often are the most exposed – helping to optimize the resource and to control the intervention, also providing real-time support from experts that do not need to reach the place of the event anymore. This is supposed to reduce the wastes and to improve the logistic of the action. Future scenarios that would involve the delivery of health also for children in very inaccessible settings become paradigms of a model already implementable today, aimed to give children and families better care, in spite of the geographical locations they live in.
May be used provided proper citation is given Cite as Brief Review of World Demographic Trends -Trends in Age Distributions. The Global Social Change Research Project
  • Gene Shackman
  • Xun Wang
  • Ya-Lin Liu
May be used provided proper citation is given. Cite as Shackman, Gene, Xun Wang and Ya-Lin Liu. 2012. Brief Review of World Demographic Trends -Trends in Age Distributions. The Global Social Change Research Project. Available at http://gsociology.icaap.org/report/demsumAging.html