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Home / Lifestyle

The Conversation: Why British royals tend to outlive their subjects by 30 years

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14 Apr, 2021 12:53 AM5 mins to read

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What's the secret to Prince Philip's longevity? Photo / Getty Images

What's the secret to Prince Philip's longevity? Photo / Getty Images

In the UK it is customary to receive a personalised message from the queen on your 100th birthday – such is the relative rarity of reaching the milestone.

Prince Philip was just a couple months off, dying at the age of 99 years and 10 months on April 9, 2021. The last notable royal death before his was that of the queen mother in 2002. She was 101 years old.

Reaching such a ripe old age isn't uncommon among the British ruling family – in fact, my analysis shows that on average they live an additional 30 years compared with their subjects.

I looked at the duration of life of the last six British monarchs, along with the longevity of their spouses and children – in total 27 royals. What it reveals is a fascinating and familiar story for those of us who study ageing and longevity for a living. As a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics, I had previously observed the exact same phenomenon among US presidents – they also tend to live decades longer than the general population they serve.

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An age-old story

The ruling UK monarchs from Queen Victoria onward lived an average of 75 years. And this longevity will continue to rise with each day that the Queen – currently age 95 – lives. Their spouses survived even longer, reaching an average age of 83.5 years. If Victoria's husband Prince Albert, who died of suspected typhoid fever at age 42 in 1861, is removed from the equation, the average duration of the life of the spouses of the monarchs was an astonishing 91.7 years.

By contrast, the average life duration of the wider UK population for the years the monarchs were born throughout this period was only 46 years, according to figures from the Human Mortality Database. For example, the typical life expectancy at birth for a female in the UK in 1819 was just under 41 years. Queen Victoria, also born in 1819, was 81 when she died. By the time Elizabeth II was born in 1926, life expectancy at birth for females in the UK had risen to 62 – the Queen has already surpassed that by some 33 years.

Such differences in lifespan – with some members of the royal family living to an age double that expected of the general population – are considered in ageing circles to be extremely large, but not uncommon.

Lifespan differences of this magnitude are the result of a combination of genetic as well as social and behavioural influences.

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The Queen Mother lived until the ripe old age of 101. Photo / Getty Images
The Queen Mother lived until the ripe old age of 101. Photo / Getty Images

No one can live long without first having won the genetic lottery at birth. To maximise the chances of achieving exceptional longevity – upward of 85 years old – you must begin by being lucky enough to have long-lived parents. But even for those blessed with the gift at birth of the potential for a long life, this is no guarantee you'll outlive your contemporaries.

The next challenge is to avoid behaviours that shorten life. That list is long – it is a lot easier to shorten life than extend it – but among the most well known are smoking, eating in excess and lack of exercise.

And then there is the influence of poverty and privilege. Being born into or living in poverty has been shown to be one of the most important factors that shortens lifespan – and it is here that perhaps the royals have the greatest advantage.

Further evidence of privilege being a crucial ingredient in the recipe for exceptional longevity can be seen in the fact that the children of the last six UK monarchs that died from natural causes lived an average of 69.7 years. This is some 23 years more than the average age of British subjects over that period.

A privileged existence

Put simply, British monarchs and their families live so much longer than their subjects for the same reason other subgroups of the population across the globe live longer than contemporaries born in the same year: privilege over poverty. A famous study conducted in Manchester, England, in 2017 demonstrated vast differences in life expectancy depending on the conditions of where people lived. Access to higher education and economic status was directly correlated with longer life, while lower education, income and poverty were linked to shorter lives.

In the US, similar studies of life expectancy by county, census tract and zip code demonstrated the same phenomenon. In fact, there are multiple instances of dramatic differences in longevity among people living as close as across the street from each other – caused by differences in poverty and privilege.

Differences in duration of life are first defined by genetics, but it is then heavily mediated by education, income, health care, clean water, food, indoor living and working environments, and the overall effects of high or low socioeconomic status.

The long life of Prince Philip is a cause for celebrating the progress of medical science in being able to keep people alive for longer. But it is in part the result of a privilege denied to many and a reminder that humanity has a long way to go to equalise the chances of living a long life.

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This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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