Big Picture Shows Americans are Getting Healthier 

LAURA MECKLER / AP 13sep02

Death rates for cancer, AIDS, heart disease, injuries down

Letter to the Editor San Francisco Chronicle
Published 16sep02 

U.S. HEALTH PICTURE IS NOT ALL ROSY

Editor -- Regarding the news story about a report by the National Center for Health Statistics, "Big picture shows Americans are getting healthier" (Sept. 13): The really big picture is quite different. According to other statistics, the incidence of all cancers rose 58.7 percent between 1950 and 1999. Melanomas increased 506.7 percent, female lung cancer 571.5 percent, liver cancer 206.7 percent; prostate cancer 206.1 percent and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas 189.8 percent. [1]

An expert at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warns an overall stabilization in AIDS beginning in mid-1998 may be masking increases in HIV infections. An estimated 400,000 to 500,000 Americans may not know they have the infection or are not being treated. [2]

Let's end the great fixation on death rates while ignoring that actual numbers of people getting cancers have been steadily rising for 50 years. While the survivors are no doubt thankful to be alive, I am quite sure they would prefer not to have had a life-threatening disease in the first place. 

The payback of prevention far outweighs the benefits of all other possible courses of action. 

Sincerely, 
Paul Goettlich

  1. SEER Cancer Statistics Review, 1973-1999
    http://seer.cancer.gov/csr/1973_1999/sections.html 

  2. Number of U.S. AIDS Cases Remain Stable After Recent Declines: New data suggest increases in HIV infection in select populations
    http://www.cdc.gov/od/oc/media/pressrel/r020707.htm 

WASHINGTON - Death is on the decline for babies, adults and older people alike, with AIDS, homicide, cancer and heart disease all claiming fewer lives, the government reports in its annual look at American health.

Life expectancy reached a record high of 76.9 years, with the gaps between blacks and whites as well as men and women narrowing over time.

The report released Thursday looks at health trends spanning the second half of the 20th century and finds improvement on almost every measure.

"When you take the long view, you see clearly how far we've come," said Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson.

With better medical care and a drop in smoking rates, death rates for heart disease have been cut in more than half, and they have declined even more dramatically for stroke and other cerebrovascular disease.

Death rates from injuries, particularly motor vehicle crashes, have also fallen since about 1970, with safer cars on the road and more people wearing seat belts.

It's not all good news. Death rates for diabetes, along with the number of cases, are climbing, largely the result of a sharp increase in obesity.

All of these factors contribute to life expectancy, and people are certainly living longer.

The average baby born in 1900 could expect to live 47.3 years, and that gauge has been climbing ever since. By 1950, life expectancy had risen to 68.2, and it reached 76.9 in 2000.

Throughout the century, women and whites have lived longer, but those gaps are closing, the report shows.

In 1950, whites lived 8.3 years longer than blacks. By 2000, that gap was 5.6 years.

For gender, the gap was at its peak in 1970, when women lived 7.6 years longer than men. By 2000, the gap was 5.4 years.

The report, produced by the National Center for Health Statistics, found drops in death at every stage of life and for many diseases. Specifically:

Infant mortality: The portion of babies dying before their first birthday was at a record low in 2000, 6.9 per 1,000 live births. That rate has fallen 75 percent since 1950.

Young deaths: Mortality among children and young adults, between 12 months and 24 years, declined by more than half since 1950. Researchers credited drops in death rates in accidents, cancer, heart disease and infectious diseases. Homicide and suicide rates generally increased over the half century, though they have been falling since the mid1990s.

Adults: Death among adults ages 25 to 44 declined by more than 40 percent between 1950 and 1999. During the mid-1990s, HIV was the leading cause of death for this age group, but these rates have fallen significantly.

Older adults: Mortality among adults age 45 to 64 fell by nearly 50 percent, including drops in heart disease, stroke and injury. Cancer is the leading cause of death in this group, and those death rates rose slowly through the 1980s and then began to decline.

Heart disease: Much of the improvement in life expectancy is traced to falling heart disease rates. In 1950, just over 585 people in the United States developed heart disease for every 100,000. By 1999, that had been more than cut in half, falling to just under 268 people per 100,000.

Stroke: In 1950, nearly 181 of every 100,000 people died of stroke and other cerebrovascular disease. By 1999, it was just 62 per 100,000.

The report, which also examines trends in the use of hospitals, found fewer people being admitted and shorter stays for those who do go in. It found a sharp drop in use of home health care, a reaction to new Medicare payment restrictions.


Life expectancy for Americans reaches new high of 76.9 years 

AP 13sep02

WASHINGTON-- Life expectancy is at an all-time high, and the gaps between blacks and whites, men and women are continuing to narrow, the government reported in its annual look at American health. 

Overall, the death rate is on the decline for babies, adults and older people alike, with AIDS, homicide, cancer and heart disease all claiming fewer lives, according to the report released Thursday, which examines health trends spanning the second half of the 20th century and finds improvement on almost every measure. 

"When you take the long view, you see clearly how far we've come," said Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson. 

With better medical care and a drop in smoking rates, death rates for heart disease have been cut in more than half, and they have declined even more dramatically for stroke and other cerebrovascular disease. 

Death rates from injuries, particularly motor vehicle crashes, have also fallen since about 1970, with safer cars on the road and more people wearing seat belts. 

It's not all good news. Death rates for diabetes, along with the number of cases, are climbing, largely the result of a sharp increase in obesity.

If you have come to this page from an outside location click here to get back to mindfully.org