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Life with Hazard Ratios

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dynomight · Jul 2026 · science health math

If you read anything about health or longevity, you’ll soon find yourself in a world of hazard ratios. Some study might say that eating more fiber might change your risk of dying by a factor of HR = 0.90. Another might say that occasional smoking might change it by HR = 1.30.

But how much should you care about that? Is HR = 0.90 or HR = 1.30 a lot? What if you don’t want to eat more fiber? What if you like smoking?

Instead of staring at a ratio, a more sensible thing to do is think about life expectancy. But is it possible to convert a hazard ratio to a change in life expectancy? You might reason as follows: Baseline life expectancy is around 75 years. And HR = 0.90 corresponds to a 10% decrease in mortality. So perhaps that hazard ratio corresponds to something like 7.5 extra years of life expectancy?

Unfortunately, that’s completely wrong. To see why, imagine that humans only die by playing Russian roulette. They start playing this once per day at the age of 75, with a revolver containing two bullets and six chambers. If you were to remove one of those two bullets, that would drop the person’s risk of death by HR = 0.5. (One bullet versus two.) But life expectancy would barely change, because even with just one bullet, almost nobody would survive for any significant amount of time past 75.

For contrast, imagine again that humans only die via Russian roulette, but now they do this once per day from birth with a revolver with 2 bullets and 54,786 chambers. (Newborns emerge and instinctively reach for this gigantic gun.) You can show that these people also live 75 years on average. But now, if you remove one of the bullets, life expectancy doubles, because when someone is spared, it takes a long time before they get unlucky again.

Neither of those is a good model for humans. We’re somewhere between the two, with heart disease and so on instead of revolvers and risks slowly rising as we age instead of suddenly starting at age 75 or staying constant throughout life. But you get the point: If you want to convert a hazard ratio for some intervention to a change in life expectancy, the impact depends on how “spread out” baseline mortality risk is over time. Baseline life expectancy is simply not enough information.

That’s one problem. Here’s another: What even is a hazard ratio? The technical definition is something like:

The hazard ratio at a given time is the rate of an event in the treatment group divided by the rate of that event in the control group.

Hazard ratios are often confused with their more beloved siblings, relative risks. Say you run a trial for 10 years and at the end, 10% of the control group died and 8% of the treatment group. Then the relative risk is RR = 0.8, nice and simple. But relative risks have problems, most notably that if you run a long enough trial, then no one will be alive at the end no matter the intervention, meaning RR = 1.0. That’s not helpful. Intuitively, you can think of the hazard ratio at age 40 as sort of like the relative risk for people between the ages of 39.99 and 40.01.

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