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Life expectancy in most US counties falls
behind world's healthiest nations
The
most current county-level analysis finds
large disparities nationwide; women fare
worse than men, and people in Appalachia,
the Deep South, and Northern Texas live the
shortest lives
SEATTLE – While people in Japan, Canada, and
other nations are enjoying significant gains
in life expectancy every year, most counties
within the United States are falling behind,
according to a new study by the Institute
for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at
the University of Washington.
IHME researchers, in collaboration with
researchers at Imperial College London,
found that between 2000 and 2007, more than
80% of counties fell in standing against the
average of the 10 nations with the best life
expectancies in the world, known as the
international frontier.
"We are finally able to answer the question
of how the US fares in comparison to its
peers globally," said Dr. Christopher
Murray, IHME Director and one of the paper's
co-authors. "Despite the fact that the US
spends more per capita than any other nation
on health, eight out of every 10 counties
are not keeping pace in terms of health
outcomes. That's a staggering statistic."
The new study, Falling behind: life
expectancy in US counties from 2000 to 2007
in an international context, is published
June 15 in Biomed Central's open-access
journal Population Health Metrics. In
conjunction with the study, IHME is
releasing a complete time series for life
expectancy from 1987 to 2007 for 3,138
counties and 10 cities, the most up-to-date
analysis available.
"When compared to the international frontier
for life expectancy, US counties range from
being 16 calendar years ahead to more than
50 behind for women. For men the range is
from 15 calendar years ahead to more than 50
calendar years behind. This means that some
counties have a life expectancy today that
nations with the best health outcomes had in
1957."
Hopefully it's not too late to fix it.
Thanks in advance.
The researchers suggest that the relatively
low life expectancies in the US cannot be
explained by the size of the nation, racial
diversity, or economics. Instead, the
authors point to high rates of obesity,
tobacco use, and other preventable risk
factors for an early death as the leading
drivers of the gap between the US and other
nations.
Five counties in Mississippi have the lowest
life expectancies for women, all below 74.5
years, putting them behind nations such as
Honduras, El Salvador, and Peru. Four of
those counties, along with Humphreys County,
MS, have the lowest life expectancies for
men, all below 67 years, meaning they are
behind Brazil, Latvia, and the Philippines.
Women live the longest in Collier, FL, at 86
years on average, better than France,
Switzerland, and Spain. Men live the longest
in Fairfax County, VA, at 81.1 years, which
is higher than life expectancies in Japan
and Australia. Women are also living long
lives in Teton, Wyoming; San Mateo and
Marin, California; and Montgomery, Maryland.
For men, long life spans also can be found
in Marin, California; Montgomery, Maryland;
Santa Clara, California; and Douglas,
Colorado.
Nationwide, women fare more poorly than men.
The researchers found that women in 1,373
counties – about 40% of US counties – fell
more than five years behind the nations with
the best life expectancies. Men in about
half as many counties – 661 total – fell
that far.
Black men and women have lower life
expectancies than white men and women in all
counties. Life expectancy for black women
ranges from 69.6 to 82.6 years, and for
black men, from 59.4 to 77.2 years. In both
cases, no counties are ahead of the
international frontier, and some are more
than 50 years behind. The researchers were
not able to analyze other race categories
because of low population levels in many
counties.
Change in life expectancy is so uneven that
within some states there is now a decade
difference between the counties with the
longest lives and those with the shortest.
States such as Arizona, Florida, Virginia,
and Georgia have seen counties leap forward
more than five years from 1987 to 2007 while
nearby counties stagnate or even lose years
of life expectancy.
In Arizona, Yuma County's average life
expectancy for men increased 8.5 years,
nearly twice the national average, while
neighboring La Paz County, lost a full year
of life expectancy, the steepest drop
nationwide. Nationally, life expectancy
increased 4.3 years for men and 2.4 years
for women between 1987 and 2007.
"By creating this time series, which has
never been available at the county level, we
hope states and counties will be able to
take targeted action," Dr. Sandeep Kulkarni,
an IHME research fellow and the paper's lead
author, said. "Counties in one part of the
state should not be benefiting from big
increases in life expectancy while other
counties are actually seeing life spans
shrink."
The authors propose that state and local
policymakers use the life expectancy data
and the county comparisons to tailor
strategies that will fit the dynamics of
their communities. This resonates with local
policymakers, such as Dr. David Fleming,
Director of Public Health - Seattle & King
County.
"It's not the health care system that's
having the biggest impact on health; it's
the community," Dr. Fleming said. "The
average person in the US spends one hour
annually in a physician's office unless they
are really sick. So until we start moving
our interventions out into the communities
where people live, we are not going to get
ahead of these problems."
The Seattle & King County health department
is collaborating with IHME on an ambitious
analysis of health in King County, one of
the largest studies of its kind. Called the
Monitoring Disparities in Chronic Conditions
(MDCC) Study, researchers are integrating
data from emergency medical services,
hospital discharge databases, pharmacy
records, and other sources to identify the
biggest health challenges in King County.
They are surveying 9,000 people and taking
blood samples to analyze for a range of risk
factors and diseases.
"We are building the evidence for focused
interventions that will make an impact
locally," said Dr. Ali Mokdad, Professor of
Global Health at IHME, who is leading the
MDCC Study. "If we as a society are going to
fund programs to improve health, we must
ensure that we are measuring the impact,
because these life expectancy numbers show
that what we have been doing up until now
clearly is not working."
###
The Institute for Health Metrics and
Evaluation (IHME) is an independent global
research center at the University of
Washington providing sound measurement of
population health and the factors that
determine health, as well as rigorous
evaluation of health system and health
program performance. The Institute's goal is
to improve population health by providing
the best evidence possible to guide health
policy – and by making that evidence easily
accessible to decision-makers as they
strategically fund, design, and implement
programs to improve health outcomes
worldwide. IHME was created in 2007 through
funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation and the state of Washington.
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