State of health in Southeast Asia - statistics & facts
Life expectancy
At around 84 years, Singapore has the highest life expectancy in Southeast Asia, followed by Thailand and Malaysia in the upper seventies. In contrast, Laos, Timor-Leste, and Myanmar have average life expectancies below 70 years. The leading causes of death in Southeast Asia are non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular diseases, chronic respiratory diseases, and cancer. In 2022, more than 700 thousand Southeast Asians died of cancer, with lung, liver, and breast cancer being the deadliest cancer types in the region.Food security and nutrition
Food insecurity and malnutrition are also major causes of shortened life expectancy rates in some Southeast Asian countries. As a subregion, SEA has the second lowest prevalence of food insecurity in the Asia-Pacific region, and the number of undernourished people has also declined steadily over the past decade. However, some countries such as the Philippines and Timor-Leste still have a high share of low birth weight babies due to maternal malnutrition.Endemic tropical and subtropical diseases
Due to its climate, Southeast Asia is home to many tropical diseases. Many of these diseases are mosquito-borne, including malaria, dengue fever, chikungunya, and Japanese encephalitis. In the first five months of 2024, there had already been more than 100 thousand dengue fever cases in Southeast Asia, most of them in Indonesia and Malaysia.Over the past decade, the number of malaria cases in Southeast Asia has decreased from over 13 million per year to around five million in 2022. This decline can be attributed to successful preventative measures such as large-scale vaccination and building strategies such as indoor residual spraying (IRS) of walls where mosquitoes are known to rest as well as insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) around beds.