학술논문

US life expectancy stalls due to cardiovascular disease, not drug deaths
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. March 31, 2020, Vol. 117 Issue 13, p6998, 3 p.
Subject
Drugs -- Overdose
Mortality -- Analysis
Life expectancy -- Analysis
Cardiovascular diseases -- Drug therapy
Science and technology
Language
English
ISSN
0027-8424
Abstract
After decades of robust growth, the rise in US life expectancy stalled after 2010. Explanations for the stall have focused on rising drug-related deaths. Here we show that a stagnating decline in cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality was the main culprit, out-pacing and overshadowing the effects of all other causes of death. The CVD stagnation held back the increase of US life expectancy at age 25 y by 1.14 y in women and men, between 2010 and 2017. Rising drug-related deaths had a much smaller effect: 0.1 y in women and 0.4 y in men. Comparisons with other high-income countries reveal that the US CVD stagnation is unusually strong, contributing to a stark mortality divergence between the US and peer nations. Without the aid of CVD mortality declines, future US life expectancy gains must come from other causes--a monumental task given the enormity of earlier declines in CVD death rates. Reversal of the drug overdose epidemic will be beneficial, but insufficient for achieving pre-2010 pace of life expectancy growth. life expectancy | mortality | cardiovascular disease | drug-related mortality | opioid epidemic