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The web site WEBMD.com, today reported that living to 100 years old may not be so far fetched.
The study was published by researchers including Kaare Christensen, MD, of the Danish Aging Research Centre at the University of Southern Denmark.
Christensen and the other researches state that life expectancy in most developed countries keeps growing and shows no sign of decreasing. But they also believe that it remains to be seen if obesity, which has also been growing, will stop rising life expectancies.
Will people be healthy in their “third age”? It may be too soon to tell.
For the record, Japan has the world’s longest life expectancy — 83 years for babies born in 2007, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
Life expectancy is 77.9 years for U.S. babies born in 2007, according to preliminary data from the CDC.