The health and longevity of a population is a key barometer of overall welfare, reflecting the cumulative effects of the broader social, economic, and environmental conditions in which people live. How long we and our loved ones live should be one of the most important questions for society. Recently, life expectancy improvements in the US, UK, and some parts of Europe appear to have stalled after decades of improvement. The COVID-19 pandemic added another huge mortality shock to these pre-existing trends. The MORTAL project seeks to understand why these mortality trends seem to be moving in the wrong direction in many countries. The current research is dominated by a U.S. perspective, yet it is unclear whether the same mechanisms and trends exist in Europe. A clear picture of the drivers of international mortality trends requires an ambitious interdisciplinary effort to combine both theory and data, bringing together diverse expertise (demography, biology, epidemiology, genetics, sociology, economics).
MORTAL combines a biosocial approach with demographic theory to understand the underlying drivers of population mortality. The project aims to answer several important questions:
• When and how are we dying? How is this changing over time and countries?
• What are the most important social and economic changes in people’s life trajectories over the last several decades, and how have these changes impacted mortality?
• How have biological risks changed across generations, including exposure to obesity, infections, smoking, and environmental exposures? How can we use emerging biological signatures including epigenetics and the microbiome to look back in time at early life exposures and predict future trends?
• How will changes in biological and social risk across cohorts affect mortality going forward in Europe and beyond?
Building a model from cells to society, MORTAL will integrate knowledge across disciplines to answer the vital question: as populations, how long do we live, and why?