Club Vita
Kirsty Brunton is a seasoned professional in longevity analysis, currently serving as a Senior Longevity Analyst at Club Vita since April 2009, after holding the position of Longevity Analyst. Prior to this role, Kirsty gained extensive experience at Aon Consulting from October 1999 to March 2009 as a Senior Pensions Administrator, and earlier at Scottish Mutual as a Pensions Administrator from September 1996 to October 1999. Kirsty Brunton holds a BA Honours degree in Geography from the University of Strathclyde, completed between 1991 and 1995.
This person is not in any offices
Club Vita
Club Vita is a centre of excellence for improving our understanding of patterns in human longevity. Its insights help pension funds, insurers and governments make affordable long-term promises, and foster innovation in longevity risk management. Club Vita was founded in the UK in 2008 and has subsequently expanded to Canada in 2015 and the US in 2019. Our name Club Vita combines the human interest in sources of longer life - Vita being latin for life - with the power of collaboration, which courses through the veins of the club. These collaborations operate on three levels: 1. Data pooling: Every year data is pooled from our Club members (globally, over 300 defined benefit pension plans and insurers). Large numbers dampen down the statistical noise, so that the signals become clearer. Personalised risk reporting is provided to all data suppliers on a subscription basis. 2. Research: We actively support joint research with a variety of organisations. 3. Public interest: We make high level statistical insights publicly available, particularly where they can help us build a sustainable society and deliver inter-generational fairness. Club Vita is powered by a talented team. In our discussion group, friends of Club Vita, you will hear from our expert statisticians, longevity actuaries and risk strategists. Behind the scenes, we could not deliver the vast array of statistical insights without our gifted team of database architects and data processors.