USAThis paper examines healthy life expectancy by gender and education for whites and African Americans in the United States at three dates: 1970, 1980 and 1990. There are large racial and educational differences in healthy life expectancy at each date and differences by education in healthy life...
Life expectancy in the United States varies by more than 20 years depending on race and ethnicity and where you live, according to new research.
Life expectancy at birth and age 65, by gender and ethnicity, USA, 1970–2006.Source: US Department of Health and Human Services. Health United States, 2009 with chartbook on health of Americans (Figure 16). Life expectancy at birth increased dramatically in the USA from 47.3 years in 1900...
Life expectancy is a measure of how long the average person lives in a given country, and these are the countries with the highest and lowest life expectancies.
“P effect”). We use the “replacement decomposition technique” to further subdivide the M effect into the contributions by the individual education groups. While most of the increases in life expectancy are due to the effect of changing mortality, a large proportion of improvements in longevity...
We are continuing elucidating and analyzing the longer life-expectancy among those with active sun exposure habits. Next two large projects include 1/ If t... J Westerdahl,C Ingvar,A Måsbäck,... - 《International Journal of Cancer》 被引量: 266发表: 2000年 Cerebral palsy and aging Cer...
The concept of a so-called urban advantage in health ignores the possibility of heterogeneity in health outcomes across cities. Using a harmonized dataset from the SALURBAL project, we describe variability and predictors of life expectancy and proportion
However, gains among white females outpaced black females and, by 2016, the gap between them had grown to 12.06 years. This gap of 12.06 years was 482% larger than the corresponding black-white gap among U.S. females. Figure 2 Life expectancy trends in the U.S. and Washington D.C. ...
The purpose of this study was to investigate the association between subjective life expectancy (SLE) and self-rated health and further SLE will predict higher risk for mortality. Data from the Korean Longitudinal Study of Aging (KLoSA) from 2006 to 2014
This study explores the equigenesis hypothesis in urban Latin America through the following question: Does greenness modify the associations between area-level education, as a proxy for socioeconomic status, with life expectancy and cause-specific mortality? Based on existing evidence (Brown et al.,...