Alphabetical           State by State
 Health & Medicine Add/Modify your site link! Send this page to a friend!  
 Home
 Health
 Alcoholism
 Alternative Medicine
 By Age and Gender
 Child Health and Fitness
 Children's Health and Fitness
 Consumer Support Groups
 Dentistry
 Disabilities
 Education
 Education
 Emergency Services
 Employment
 Environmental Health
 First Aid
 Fitness
 General Health and Fitness
 General Health
 Geriatrics and Aging
 Health Administration
 Health Care
 Home
 Indices
 Information Media
 Institutes
 Long Term Care
 Medicine
 Men's Health and Fitness
 Men's Health
 Mental Health and Fitness
 Mental Health
 Midwifery
 Nursing
 Nutrition
 Organizations
 Pharmacology
 Pharmacy
 Procedures and Therapies
 Professions
 Public Health and Safety
 Publications
 Reproductive Health and Fitness
 Reproductive Health
 Resources
 Senior Health and Fitness
 Senses
 Services
 Substance Abuse
 Symptoms and Diseases
 Teen Health and Fitness
 Traditional Medicine
 Travel
 Weight Issues
 Weight Loss
 Womens Health and Fitness
 Women's Health
 Workplace
Copyright © 1998-01 OpenHere
Company Information
Suggest a Site
FAQ
VirtualDesk
Login:

Password:
US Life Expectancy Falls for Large Segment of Population  
Monday, April 28, 2008 2:12 AM

Smoking is one factor driving the trend toward a lower life expectancy for women in parts of the U.S.While life...


Smoking is one factor driving the trend toward a lower life expectancy for women in parts of the U.S.
Smoking is one factor driving the trend toward a lower life expectancy for women in parts of the U.S.
While life expectancy in the United States has risen steadily since the 1960s, a new study [published Tuesday] finds that in certain geographic areas of the country, life expectancy has stagnated, and even declined, especially among women.

From 1960 to 2000, life expectancy in the United States rose by seven years for men and six years for women. However, beginning in the 1980s, large geographic disparities began to appear.

The study analyzed health data from every county in the United States. According to lead author Majid Ezzati, Associate Professor of International health at Harvard School of Public Health  the "worst off" were among lower income Americans concentrated in the southern states.

He says in these communities race did not seem to affect life expectancy. "It is something associated with the way policies are implemented, with the way health systems are providing health services to people in different parts of the country or not providing services to people."

Ezzati points to chronic disease related to increases in smoking, high blood pressure and obesity as factors driving the trend. He says while much is known about how to manage these conditions, care is not reaching the people who need it the most. Women have experienced the most serious declines.

Over the last 20 years, life expectancy has either declined or stagnated for one of out every five women compared with four percent of men. Ezzati finds this a grim statistic for an industrialized nation. "We don't associate worsening of health, worsening of life expectancy with something that happens in a developed high-income country."

Ezzati says he saw such disparities after the fall of the Soviet Union and after the social networks fell apart in Eastern Europe. "That is the sort of thing that we see over long periods and what is happening with HIV/AIDS in some countries in Africa."

Ezzati says he hopes the study raises awareness about health care in America and pushes health officials and the public to monitor those being left behind. "That monitoring should be telling us something about what sort of interventions, what sort of policies can reverse this and then hopefully provide the resources for it."

Researchers from Harvard School of Public Health and the University of Washington  contributed to the study published in PloS Medicine.

Health & Medicine

  • Health Home

  • Non-Profit Organization Helps Children of US Servicemen  

  • Ghana's Hard Drug Usage Spreads to Pregnant Women  

  • Freed Colombian Hostages Reunite With Families  

  • G8 Asked to Keep Promise on AIDS Funding  

  • Bush Expects Miracles at New Walter Reed Medical Facility  

  • US Teen Birth Rate Rises After Long Decline  

  • Bush Attends Groundbreaking for New Military Medical Facility  

  • UN: 50 Million More People Hungry Due to High Food Prices

  • Zambian Officials Deny Reports Mwanawasa Has Died

  • American Red Cross Urges Blood Donation  

  • Magnetic Device Could Help Migraine Sufferers  

  • Wat, Tibs and Injera - An Ethiopian Eating Experience  

  • Kenyan Honey Project Helps Raise Income  

  • WHO-led Group Unveils New TB Testing Plan

  • Companies Offering Home Genetic Tests Come Under Fire in US  

  • Dutch Ban Tobacco, But Marijuana Still Allowed  

  • Diabetes Reaches New High in US  

  • New Research Shows Vitamin D Deficiency Linked to Health Risks  

  • Home Monitoring, Internet Advice Help Patients Improve Blood Pressure  

  • Anti-Ulcer Drug Used to Induce Abortion Safe If Taken Orally  

  • Diabetes and Depression Go Hand in Hand  

  • Researchers Get Better Understanding Of How Amoebas Give People Dysentery  

  • Cuba Announces Lung Cancer Vaccine

  • New Guidelines to Increase Safety of Surgeries

  • Diarrhea Treatment Shows Potential in Laboratory Tests  

  • Skin Cancer Vanishes With Experimental Treatment  

  • Pakistan Reports New Bird Flu Outbreak

  • US Inspectors Visit Florida, Mexico in Tainted Tomatoes Probe

  • Manchester United Players Team Up with UNICEF for AIDS Awareness  

  • Hong Kong Bans Sale of Live Poultry to Combat Deadly Bird Flu  


  • More Headlines