Anonymous wrote:Probably not. Most of us grew up with cats as kids when cats went outside from time to time. I always thought that cats lived for about 10 years. I was shocked when my indoor cat lived until 19. In hindsight, I should have put my cat down when she was 17 but vets are very aggressive in their treatment of diseases now. In the past, a vet would just recommend euthanizing an animal with a chronic illness that impacted its quality of life but now they push to keep them alive as long as possible. You don't want to argue with someone to kill the pet that you love but again in hindsight it is more cruel IMO to keep them around with lots of interventions, surgeries and medications when they are declining.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She most likely told the truth and inadvertently lied, and the difference is what is known as actuary science. Take a look at an actuarial table. I don't have one for cats, but here is one for people:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/47/Excerpt_from_CDC_2003_Table_1.pdf
You can see on this table, that the life expectancy at birth is 77 years.
Yet, if you look up a 67 year old person on this table, they are expected to live another 17.6 years, ie until 84.5
How can that be, especially since medicine has improved so much since that retiree was born? Shouldn't the baby live much longer than someone born in 1944?
The answer, which you can read on the table is this. The life expectancy for someone who has already made it to their 67th birthday is greater than that of an average newborn baby, because the baby faces 67 years in which anything could happen to shorten his life.
So if your wife tells you that cats usually live 12-14 years, that is true. But what you really care is how many more years an 8-15 year old cat can expect to live. You and I both know that 15 year old cat is not staring death in the face. He made it 15 years, and so he could live a lot longer.
OMG! Are you serious? I hope not! Does that mean that someone who is 92y old will not die anytime soon?
Anonymous wrote:She most likely told the truth and inadvertently lied, and the difference is what is known as actuary science. Take a look at an actuarial table. I don't have one for cats, but here is one for people:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/47/Excerpt_from_CDC_2003_Table_1.pdf
You can see on this table, that the life expectancy at birth is 77 years.
Yet, if you look up a 67 year old person on this table, they are expected to live another 17.6 years, ie until 84.5
How can that be, especially since medicine has improved so much since that retiree was born? Shouldn't the baby live much longer than someone born in 1944?
The answer, which you can read on the table is this. The life expectancy for someone who has already made it to their 67th birthday is greater than that of an average newborn baby, because the baby faces 67 years in which anything could happen to shorten his life.
So if your wife tells you that cats usually live 12-14 years, that is true. But what you really care is how many more years an 8-15 year old cat can expect to live. You and I both know that 15 year old cat is not staring death in the face. He made it 15 years, and so he could live a lot longer.
Anonymous wrote:She most likely told the truth and inadvertently lied, and the difference is what is known as actuary science. Take a look at an actuarial table. I don't have one for cats, but here is one for people:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/47/Excerpt_from_CDC_2003_Table_1.pdf
You can see on this table, that the life expectancy at birth is 77 years.
Yet, if you look up a 67 year old person on this table, they are expected to live another 17.6 years, ie until 84.5
How can that be, especially since medicine has improved so much since that retiree was born? Shouldn't the baby live much longer than someone born in 1944?
The answer, which you can read on the table is this. The life expectancy for someone who has already made it to their 67th birthday is greater than that of an average newborn baby, because the baby faces 67 years in which anything could happen to shorten his life.
So if your wife tells you that cats usually live 12-14 years, that is true. But what you really care is how many more years an 8-15 year old cat can expect to live. You and I both know that 15 year old cat is not staring death in the face. He made it 15 years, and so he could live a lot longer.