Girls born in Denbighshire face more than a dozen years of poor health in later life, figures reveal.

With people across the UK now expected to live longer in ill health, experts have called for “urgent action” to reverse the trend.

Data from the Office for National Statistics shows that girls born in Denbighshire between 2016 and 2018 have an average life expectancy of 81.5 years – below the UK average of 82.9.

But their healthy life expectancy is 65.9, meaning they will spend an anticipated 15.7 years struggling with their well-being.

Healthy life expectancy is partly based on a survey in which people are asked about their general health.

People who answer that it is “very good” or “good” are classed as having good health, while those answering “fair”, “bad” or “very bad” have poorer health.

Boys born in the area between 2016 and 2018 have an average life expectancy of 78.0 years, and can expect to live 63.9 of those in good health on average.

That leaves 14.1 years they would spend in worse health.

While data for healthy life expectancy in Denbighshire was not available for 2009 to 2011, across the UK, the amount of time spent in poorer health increased for both sexes over the period.

Angus Hanton, co-founder of the Intergenerational Foundation, which promotes intergenerational fairness, said: “Unless urgent action is taken, we could be consigning children born today, and particularly those from more deprived areas, to longer periods of ill health in old age.

“This is preventable but it needs commitment from the new government to prioritise funding.”

Caroline Abrahams, charity director at Age UK, said older women are more likely than men to be living on a low income, and could be hit hard by difficulties accessing social care.

She added: “It’s vital that everyone in later life has access to the support and information they need to stay well in retirement, wherever they happen to live.”

Across the UK, average life expectancy at birth for men in 2016-18 was 79.3, while healthy life expectancy was 63.1 years.

Women were expected to live 82.9 years, 63.6 of them in good health.

The estimated time men are expected to be in poorer health increased by around half a year from 2009 2011, and almost three-quarters of a year for women.

A Department of Health and Social Care spokeswoman said: "We are committed to reducing the gap in life expectancy by 2035 and our NHS Long Term Plan, backed by an extra £33.9 billion in cash terms a year by 2023-24, puts tackling health inequalities at its heart."