Setting World Cup considerations - or grievances - to one side, the 14-nation study found that in 2003 Portugal had the lowest life expectancy at birth for men - almost 4 years less than the highest (Sweden).

Italy and France were the top two nations for life expectancy among women. Italy narrowly beat France as far as life-expectancy for men was concerned.

Between 1995 and 2003 life expectancy at birth rose in all 14 European countries by on average 3 months each year for men and 2 months for women, claims the report from the first year's work of the European Health Expectancy Monitoring Unit* (EHEMU).

In 2003 Portugal had the lowest life expectancy at birth for men, almost 4 years less than the highest (Sweden). Women's life expectancy was lowest in Denmark and highest in France.

Life Expectancy (LE) Men and Women 2003

Austria
Men 76.4 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 4
Women 82.5 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 4

Belgium
Men 75.4 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3
Women 81.3 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 1

Denmark
Men 75.8 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 4
Women 80.1 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3

Finland
Men 75.1 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3
Women 81.8 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 2

France
Men 76.1 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3
Women 83.2 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 2

GB
Men 76.1 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3
Women 80.5 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 2

Germany
Men 76.3 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 4
Women 81.8 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3

Greece
Men 75.7 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 1
Women 80.7 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) <1 month

Ireland
Men 74.9 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3
Women 80.7 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 2

Italy
Men 77.3 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3
Women 83.1 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 2

Netherlands
Men 76.2 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 2
Women 80.7 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 1

Portugal
Men 74.2 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3
Women 80.8 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3

Spain
Men 76.2 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 3
Women 83 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 2

Sweden
Men 78 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 2
Women 82.2 --- Annual increase in LE at birth (months) 1

?Whether the extra years of life gained were spent in good or bad health remains a crucial question,? said Professor Carol Jagger from the University of Leicester who co-leads the EHEMU project.

?Compared to life expectancy, disability-free life expectancy varied more widely across the EU countries but this may be due to cultural differences in how people report disability. So at present ranking countries by the years people live without disability is not recommended. However the trends between 1995 and 2001 will be less sensitive to such differences so we can compare how disability-free life expectancy is tracking life expectancy between countries?.

The report found that between 1995 and 2001 Belgium, Italy and Spain appeared to be the healthiest countries as both men and women's disability-free life expectancy at birth was increasing faster than life expectancy. In Denmark, Great Britain and Portugal disability-free life expectancy was increasing at the same rate as life expectancy. Other countries showed differences between men and women: in the Netherlands men's disability-free life expectancy increased faster than life expectancy but women's disability-free life expectancy declined over the period so Dutch women were living longer but the extra years were spent with disability.

?We now have to explore the reasons for these differences through in-depth analyses? said Professor Jagger. ?EU countries vary widely on a number of factors that could be responsible such as smoking and diet as well as the prevalence of diseases that commonly result in disability such as stroke and coronary heart disease. The new EU structural indicator Healthy Life Years which will be based on more comparable data, is an important step forward in monitoring the health of our ageing European populations for future planning.

The EHEMU project is funded by the EU Public Health Programme from 2004-2007 and is a collaboration between four teams based in: CRLC and the University of Montpellier in France (Jean-Marie Robine); the University of Leicester, UK (Carol Jagger); the Scientific Institute of Public Health, Belgium (Herman van Oyen); and the French National Institute of Demography, INED (Emmanuelle Cambois). The main aim of EHEMU is to provide a central facility for the co-ordinated analysis and synthesis of life and health expectancies.

The full report can be accessed at: Click here to see the FULL REPORT (PDF).

University of Leicester
http://www.leicester.ac.uk