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New Record-High U.S. Life Expectancy

03/16/11 04:18 PM ET   AP

Us Life Expectancy

ATLANTA — U.S. life expectancy has hit another all-time high, rising above 78 years. The estimate of 78 years and 2 months is for a baby born in 2009, and comes from a preliminary report released Wednesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

About 2.4 million people died in the United States in 2009 – roughly 36,000 fewer deaths than the year before.

Deaths were down for a range of causes, from heart disease to homicide, so experts don't believe there's one simple explanation for the increase in life expectancy. Better medical treatment, vaccination campaigns and public health measures against smoking are believed to be having an impact.

U.S. life expectancy has been generally increasing since at least the 1940s, though some years it held steady and a few times it temporarily dipped.

Previously, the CDC said a one-month dip occurred in 2008 to 77 years and 11 months. But in Wednesday's report, the agency corrected that to 78 years, attributing the glitch to a computer programming error.

Belatedly, "we realized there's something wrong here" in the 2008 estimate, said Ken Kochanek, a CDC statistician.

The 2009 report by the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics is based on nearly all the death certificates for that year. A final report is due later this year.

More good news from the new report: The infant mortality rate hit a record low of 6.42 deaths per 1,000 live births, a drop of nearly 3 percent from 2008.

But not everyone benefitted. While life expectancy for whites rose, it held steady for blacks. The infant mortality rate for black babies did not improve either.

As a result, the racial gap got a little wider. Whites already live about four years longer than blacks, and the margin grew by about two months.

The gap between the sexes also persisted. Overall male life expectancy is roughly 75 1/2 , for females it's about 80 1/2.

Other highlights from the 2009 report include:

_ Death rates declined slightly for 10 of the 15 leading causes of death, including heart disease, cancer, stroke, accidents, Alzheimer's disease, homicide and influenza and pneumonia.

_Suicide passed blood infections to become the 10th leading cause of death. Suicide rates did not change significantly, but the blood infection death rate dropped nearly 2 percent. That puts suicide back in the top 10 causes of deaths for the first time since 1999, Kochanek said.

_The influenza/pneumonia death rate dropped nearly 5 percent, even though 2009 was the year that the swine flu pandemic hit.

Flu deaths rose by about 1,000 in 2009 from the year before, but pneumonia deaths dropped by nearly 4,000. Pneumonia is a flu complication most often seen in the elderly, and is a main reason why the overwhelming majority of flu-related deaths most years occur in the elderly. But while swine flu hit young adults and kids unusually hard, it caused relatively mild illness for people 55 and older.

"The irony is there were less deaths because the elderly were spared in this pandemic," said Dr. Keith Klugman, a professor of global health at Atlanta's Emory University.

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ATLANTA — U.S. life expectancy has hit another all-time high, rising above 78 years. The estimate of 78 years and 2 months is for a baby born in 2009, and comes from a preliminary report released We...
ATLANTA — U.S. life expectancy has hit another all-time high, rising above 78 years. The estimate of 78 years and 2 months is for a baby born in 2009, and comes from a preliminary report released We...
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09:19 PM on 04/07/2011
Living longer is great news, but if you want to look and feel younger as you get older, visit www.lookandfeelyoungsite.com. There you will find natural products and great information on anti aging, hair loss, male issues, and much more.
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VJSleight
Tobacco Treatment Specialist
04:16 PM on 03/29/2011
The decrease in smoking rates are a huge factor in the decline of deaths from heart disease, cancer, and strokes. The old paradigm was that when you got old, you get a disease and died but now we know that lifestyle factors such as a nicotine addiction will make a difference between a long life and a short death, and a short life with a long death.
04:28 PM on 03/18/2011
How do we compare with the rest of the world?
01:12 PM on 03/18/2011
Things change . . .
in general people are more receptive and engaged in their health and well-being.

The internet allows for global medical communications, research sharing, and perspective to the medical community . . . . and the consumer.

Expanding health knowledge, health literacy enhances self efficacy and impacts health outcome. Health efficacy impacts healthcare costs.
http://www.Into-The-Heart.com
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FlexHourJobs
Work-life Balance for Women and Baby Boomers
10:36 AM on 03/18/2011
That means that people who retire at 62 will have another 13-18 additional years to support themselves.Many Baby Boomers plan on working longer . The concept of old age is being replaced by a longer and more active "middle" age. Currently over 34% of people say they plan never to retire. I think retirement is no longer ever going to be decades-long time of relaxation and fun.That is gone forever. Today people want to remain connected, challenged and engaged in well-paying work.
Jacqueline
http://www.FlexHourJobs.com
01:35 PM on 03/23/2011
"Today people want to remain connected, challenged and engaged in well-payin­g work." That would be nice but you can't always get what you want.
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Dyson
debunking pseudoscience, one fallacy at a time.
08:23 AM on 03/18/2011
Everything is relative.
The UK has a much higher life expectancy, and they are down near the bottom of the European survival league.

"The latest figures from 2009 show that life expectancy in the UK is 82.6 years for women and 78.4 years for men."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-12771594
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defortier
Editor of Brain Today Blog.
11:50 PM on 03/17/2011
Living longer is great, but only if the quality of that longer life is adequate.
11:23 PM on 03/17/2011
Before we begin beating their chests and reciting the line fed to us, day in and day out by our media and government leaders, such as "we are the champions" and we are bigger, better, and more powerful blah, blah, balh, let's have a reality check.

This article fails to mention that the USA ranking, as compared to the rest of the world, is not as great the hyperbole about our greatness paints us. Figures, which include stats from 2005 through 2010, indicate that America is ranked number THIRTY-SIX. It falls behind Japan, Hong Kong, Iceland, Switzerland, Spain, Sweden, Israel, France, Canada, Italy, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore, Austria, Netherlands, France, Greece, Belgium, The United Kingdom, Germany, Finland, Ireland, Costa Rica, United Arab Emirates, South Korea, and Chile. After thirty-five other countries, America shares the rank of thirty-six in the world with Denmark and Cuba for life expectancy.

Of those thirty-five countries that precede the USA, all have a form of government supported healthcare be it single payer, two tier or mandated.

In the USA everything, every thing, is about money and those running the government know about money because they can all buy and sell most of us. The only hope we can have is that enough of them still have a soul that hasn't been bought and paid for through a lobbiest by a major corporate industrialist looking to minimize govenment to maximize profits.
10:50 PM on 03/17/2011
I can tell you one reason people are living longer... everyone looks a dieing as a form of giving up and not something that is inevitable. Everyone wants to put grandma, who has end stage alzheimers and aspiration pneumonia because she can no longer eat properly, on a ventilator. I can tell you that a ventilator will not save grandma's life. What a ventilator will do is cost approx 3000 dollars a day to manage; but no one seems to care because grandma has medicare and they don't have to pay for it out of their own pockets, society does; how convenient.
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AngelaQuattrano
I just like to write comments
12:50 AM on 03/22/2011
"People" aren't living longer. Rich people are living longer. The others, not so much.
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joedas
My former employer would forbid it,
07:59 PM on 03/17/2011
How many "oldies" are happy living in a world of plastics?
07:30 PM on 03/17/2011
Of course we have to raise the retirement age. Get real. Retirement plans and Social Security were designed to kick in at 65 back in a time when everyone was dead by 70. If you want everyone to live longer (and I guess we do?) then they must expect to work longer too or take smaller pensions designed to last longer. Money cannot be 'magicked' out of thin air. And I'm a lefty - but a realistic one.
We do have 'soclialized' medicine - it's called Medicare.
In terms of infant mortality, there are currently some 40+ countries doing better than the USA, (and I got the figure off that hotbed of Socialism, CIA.gov) which is kind of shaming. Those countries who do better by their babies include Slovenia, Cuba and the Northern Mariana Islands as well as economic basket cases Ireland and Greece. I guess it's just a question of spending priorities? We give tax breaks to the rich. Other nations invest in ante and post natal care. It's still mostly non white babies not making it in the USA. This is not necessarily something of which to be proud.
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invient
The invisible hand just gave us the finger!
08:20 PM on 03/17/2011
"Money cannot be 'magicked' out of thin air."

Fractional Reserve Banking... the credit default swaps market... I think those magically created money (I may be wrong :P )
09:22 PM on 03/17/2011
"Funny" money..... Monopoly play money. I'm talking about the read deal, money earned by companies making things and selling them to an eager waiting world and workers being paid for their labor and everyone getting taxed fairly. I'm old fashioned like that..... I actually believe in working for a living, a fair day's pay for a fair day's labor.

Although if someone could explain to me in less than ten minutes exactly what a 'credit default swap' is, I might be tempted to try that instead....... I'm a poor dumb scientist, not a banker so I'll never be rich.
07:25 PM on 03/17/2011
Live longer. Die poorer!
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lawyerfan
08:26 PM on 03/17/2011
Okay by me. I'd rather be alive and poor than dead and wealthy.
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alongst
too often denied to speak
05:50 PM on 03/17/2011
Odd- from all the hysterics from the left, I thought we were dropping like flies without socialized medicine ?
07:06 PM on 03/17/2011
No, people are going broke trying to pay for health care and if they have insurance, the money that the insurance companies skim off the top -- a portion of which they pay to lobbyists to game the system even more in their favor. Personally, I'm gave up a profitable and promising small business, so I could get on a group plan that would cover a pre-existing condition. So much for my American dream...

And incidentally, nearly all seniors are participating in socialized medicine -- its called Medicare. I suspect that has a large influence on the growing life expectancy.
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lawyerfan
08:30 PM on 03/17/2011
Yes. Here's hoping that all those people who are so adamantly opposed to socialism drop dead before they become medicare eligible. That way they will maintain their capitalist purity.
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alongst
too often denied to speak
09:19 AM on 03/18/2011
Medicare is a bad joke that is almost bankrupt. Payments are about to be reduced again and few people on medicare can now find a doctor that accepts it. That will get much worse soon. So enjoy your socialist experiment and get ready for very long waits for most treatment.And get used to being told "No" for tests and treatments, or the government losing your medical records.
05:12 PM on 03/17/2011
Ya just know someone's going to see this as excuse to raise retirement age. Especially since this is the first time we haven't had a balanced budget since the last 2 administrations - and it's got to be an emergency isn't it?
04:43 PM on 03/17/2011
I think that life expectancy improves as people engage in better health habits such as healthier eating, more exercise, seatbelt use, and cessation of smoking, etc. All these preventive measures are in addition to the fact that medical science has given us newer and better treatments for a host of diseases.