Americans used to outlive their peers. Now they die 4 years sooner on average. [OC]

    by rhiever

    16 Comments

    1. Mrgoodtrips64 on

      Lower overall happiness, lower home ownership rates, *and* dying younger? Who says the American dream is dead?

    2. DickinessMaximus on

      Thank god why would I want to be around longer. I wish it was sooner than 4 years honestly.

    3. i’ve played with this data from time to time. the cuts by race and income level, while unsurprising, are sad. wealthy ($300k HHI or higher, arbitrary, but i had to pick something) and/or white americans are still generally on par with those peers, especially when combined (wealthy and white), and often times higher. the wealthiest americans have an average life expectancy around 89. when looking at nearly every other ethnicity and income level, they are down.

      it’s such a spectacular failure of a very solvable problem that it just leaves you sad.

      sadly, it’s exactly what this administration wants. white peoples living longer and everyone else not.

    4. thebestbrian on

      Within the last few years since Covid, China has a higher life expectancy than the United States.

    5. DoublePostedBroski on

      The silver lining is that I don’t have to live long in this shithole place.

    6. jokes_on_you on

      > In 2023, a Japanese newborn can expect to live to 84.0

      This is not how it works. After all, there’s no way to predict a nuclear war or medical advances. Without getting too mathy, it’s how long they would be expected to live if they lived their entire life in 2023.

    7. All the countries have improved since 1960. The other countries have just improved more than the US has.

    8. the_mad_statter on

      Obesity rates per country:

      US – 43%
      UK – 29%
      S. Korea – 7%
      Japan – 5%

      May have something to do with it?

      Source: WHO, 2022

    9. hornswoggled111 on

      >COVID blew the gap wide open. Between 2019 and 2021, U.S. life expectancy dropped 2.5 years, from 78.8 to 76.3. Peer nations lost just 0.2 years on average over the same period.

      I’m assuming the bulk of this was due to the culture wars. That’s half the difference.

      Did America really perform that badly compared to other countries during the pandemic and aftermath? Or possibly they were more vulnerable due to the other systemic diseases?

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