Aug. 19, 2009 -- Life expectancy continues its upward trend in the U.S., notching up by about two-and-a-half months in 2007 over 2006.That may not sound like a lot, but step back and look at the gain over a decade: Babies born in 2007 have a life expectancy that's 1.4 years greater than babies born in 1997.
Here are the latest life expectancy figures, as published by the CDC today, based on preliminary data from 2007:
- Overall life expectancy for babies born in 2007: 77.9 years (up from 77.7 years in 2006)
- Life expectancy for white females born in 2007: 80.7 years (up from 80.6 years in 2006)
- Life expectancy for white males born in 2007: 75.8 years (up from 75.7 years in 2006)
- Life expectancy for black females born in 2007: 77 years (up from 76.5 years in 2006)
- Life expectancy for black males born in 2007: 70.2 years (up from 69.7 years in 2006)
The report also lists the top 15 causes of death among U.S. adults and the change in their age-adjusted death rate since 2006:
- Heart disease: down 4.7%
- Cancer: down 1.8%
- Stroke: down 4.6%
- Chronic lower respiratory diseases ( lung diseases): up 1.7%
- Accidents: down 5%
- Alzheimer's disease: no significant change
- Diabetes: down 3.9%
- Influenza and pneumonia: down 8.4%
- Kidney disease: no significant change
- Septicemia (an infection that affects the blood and other parts of the body): unchanged
- Suicide: no significant change
- Chronic liver disease and cirrhosis: no significant change
- High blood pressure (hypertension): down 2.7%
- Parkinson's disease: no significant change
- Homicide: down 6.5%
The preliminary infant death rate was 6.77 infant deaths per 1,000 live births -- essentially unchanged from 2006. The top three causes of infant death were birth defects, disorders related to short gestation and low birth weight, and sudden infant death syndrome.
A total of 2,423,995 people of all ages died in 2007, down from 2,426,264 in 2006, and the nation's age-adjusted death rate dropped.
I am sure Obama's health care plans can fix this crisis.
That's called fucking technology. Seriously what the comparison should be is US vs the rest of the industrialized countries that use a healthcare system that is like the one that YOU don't want to go to.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.photius.com/rankings/healthrnaks.html
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ReplyDeleteOMG! We simply MUST turn the health care system upside down, STAT! ...or at least by 2013.
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