To the Editor: The concept of a compression of morbidity hasimplications for health care policies and costs and for thequality of people's lives. If morbidity can indeed be compressedinto fewer years toward the end of a hypothetical "full lifespan," the amount of disability over the whole life span willbe reduced.
The paper by Vita et al. (April 9 issue)1 purports to provideevidence of such a compression. The authors state that "Notonly do persons with better health habits survive longer, butin such persons, disability is postponed and compressed intofewer years at the . . . [Full Text of this Article]
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