Japan's centenarians hit record 86,500, 10,000-plus men for 1st time
The number of centenarians as of Sept. 15 represents an increase of 6,060 from a year earlier for the 51th consecutive year of rise, the Health, Labor and Welfare Ministry said prior to the Respect for the Aged Day holiday, which falls next Monday, Kyodo reports.
Of the 86,510, women accounted for 88.4 percent or 76,450, up 5,475 from a year earlier and men totaled 10,060, up 585, the data showed.
When the survey started in 1963, the number of centenarians in the country stood at 153, but it eclipsed 1,000 in 1981 and surpassed 10,000 in 1998, due mainly to advances in medical technology.
In July, the ministry said average life expectancy in Japan, one of the most rapidly ageing populations in the world, rose to record highs for both genders in 2020 -- 87.74 for women and 81.64 for men.
Kane Tanaka, a 118-year-old resident of Fukuoka, southwestern Japan, is the oldest Japanese woman. She has been recognized as the oldest living person in the world by Guinness World Records.
Tanaka was born in 1903, the year the Wright brothers flew the world's first powered airplane.
Mikizo Ueda, a 111-year-old resident of Nara, western Japan, is the oldest Japanese man.
By prefecture, Shimane in western Japan has the highest number of centenarians per 100,000 people for the ninth straight year at 134.75, followed by Kochi and Kagoshima at 126.29 and 118.74, respectively. The nationwide average stands at 68.54.