Here’s where you’re most likely to live longest across the US
By Kevin Loria From Business Insider
A child born in 2014 in Oglala Lakota County in South Dakota, home to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, has a life expectancy of almost 67, according to data from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME).
But a child born that year in Santa Clara, California, could expect to live to 83. And in Summit County, Colorado, home to ski resorts like Breckenridge, a child born in 2014 has a life expectancy of 86.83 years — 20.1 years longer than the kid born in South Dakota.
Life expectancy rose in the US between 1980 and 2014, according to a study analyzing this IHME data, which was published May 8 in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine. But there’s a large and growing disparity in the country: Inequality in life expectancy increased over that same period of time.
See attached maps to see what the map of life expectancies for children born in 2014 looks like:
life expectancy at birth JAMA Internal Medicine, 2017
The data reveals that life expectancy is notably low in South Dakota, West Virginia, Arkansas, and Mississippi. California, New York, and Colorado have some of the highest expectancies.
change in life expectancy at birth JAMA Internal Medicine, 2017
A large amount of the variation here is explained by socioeconomic factors, as well as race and ethnicity, behaviors like smoking and healthy eating, and access to quality health care, according to the researchers behind the study.
“With every passing year, inequality — however you measure it — has been widening over the last 34 years,” Christopher Murray, head of IHME, who helped with the analysis, told NPR. “And so next year, we can reliably expect it’ll be even more than 20 … That is probably the most alarming part of the analysis.”
You can examine an interactive version of these map on the IHME website.
IMAGE:
kids school bus Shutterstock
Maps (2)
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