Seychelles: Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort)
In , Seychelles's Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort) was 84.12.
That's down 0.4% from 2023, the highest value since .
The global average for this indicator in 2024 was 82.65 . Seychelles ranks #114 globally out of 217 reporting countries. Within Sub-Saharan Africa, it ranks #3 of 48.
Source: World Bank Open Data (SP.DYN.TO65.FE.ZS) • Data as of 2024
Trend (2005–2024)
- 2020 · COVID-19 pandemic
Highlights
- Peak
- 86.38
- Trough
- 81.16
- 1-year change
- -0.4%
- 5-year change
- +1.5%
- +0.3% / yr
- 10-year change
- +1.0%
- +0.1% / yr
Historical Data — Last 10 Years
| Year | Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort) |
|---|---|
| 84.1179 | |
| 84.4628 | |
| 81.1980 | |
| 81.1618 | |
| 86.3754 | |
| 82.8409 | |
| 82.9204 | |
| 83.0257 | |
| 83.1412 | |
| 83.2037 |
About Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort)
Survival to age 65 refers to the percentage of a cohort of newborn infants that would survive to age 65, if subject to age specific mortality rates of the specified year.
Indicator code: SP.DYN.TO65.FE.ZS • Category: Health & Population
Frequently asked questions
- What was Seychelles's Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort) in 2024?
- In 2024, Seychelles's Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort) was 84.12, according to World Bank Open Data.
- Is Seychelles's Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort) rising or falling?
- Seychelles's Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort) fell 0.4% from 2023 to 2024.
- How does Seychelles rank globally on Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort)?
- In 2024, Seychelles ranked #114 out of 217 countries reporting Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort).
- How does Seychelles's Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort) compare to the world average?
- The global average for Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort) in 2024 was 82.65, so Seychelles is above the world average. Within Sub-Saharan Africa, it ranks #3 of 48.
- What is Survival to age 65, female (% of cohort) and how is it measured?
- Survival to age 65 refers to the percentage of a cohort of newborn infants that would survive to age 65, if subject to age specific mortality rates of the specified year.
Source: World Bank Open Data (SP.DYN.TO65.FE.ZS), CC BY 4.0.