According to an article in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the term “excess deaths” refers to the “difference between observed deaths and deaths expected if US death rates equaled the rates of other high-income countries.” In fact, the US has higher mortality rates than other high-income countries. In 2023, life expectancy in the US ranked 50th among other countries across the globe.
The causes of our excess mortality vary according to age
groups. For ages 25 to 55, half of the excess deaths were caused by drug poisoning,
alcohol, and suicide. For people 55 to 64, circulatory diseases and metabolic
conditions, such as diabetes, account for nearly half of the excess deaths; for
ages 64 to 84 those conditions account for more than half. For people 85 and
older, mental and nervous system disorders, such as Alzheimer’s disease, were
the leading cause of excess deaths. According to the Journal, “many of these
excess US deaths could likely be avoided by adopting health and social policies
that have benefitted other high-income countries.”
The most rapid increase in excess US deaths is the result of
drug poisonings, alcohol-related causes, and suicide—“deaths of despair”—and were
most common among males. Deaths of
despair accounted for 24 percent of the increase in US deaths from 1999 to 2022.
The Journal noted that deaths of despair are closely associated with social
disadvantage, the loss of manufacturing jobs, automation, and
worsened opportunities for less-educated workers. It also noted that “US
regions with less-protective safety net and health coverage policies have
higher and worsening mortality than other regions, as do those where majorities
voted for Donald Trump in 2016.” Whaddaya
know!
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Great share Connie - as always, thoroughly enjoy your posts! Suzanne
ReplyDeleteVery interesting, thank you, Dear Connie. Warm Summer smiles, Jil
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