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How America's changing mortality rate could be changing the country
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America's life expectancy has declined for the 2nd straight year, the CDC will report on Thursday (embargoed). The change is happening because younger people are dying sooner, not older. What could this mean if the trend continues? - photo by Jennifer Graham
For the first time in more than half a century, Americans life expectancy declined for the second straight year, a change driven by drug overdose deaths among younger people, officials said Thursday.

A baby born in 2016 could expect to live 78.6 years, down from 78.7 in 2015, the National Center for Health Statistics said in its annual mortality report released Thursday.

The change occurred not because older people are dying younger, but because of drug overdose deaths among people aged 25 to 54. And it occurred despite an overall decline in mortality.

The death rate for all Americans decreased by 0.6 percent in 2016, but it increased among younger adults. Adults aged 25-34, 35-44 and 4554 had the highest rates of drug overdose deaths among the 63,600 Americans who died of overdoses that year.

Disparities were also seen across gender lines. Life expectancy for American men declined from 76.3 to 76.1 between 2015 and 2016, but stayed the same for women, 81.1.

While the changes are slight, they are troubling to public-health officials, who note that America is the only developed nation to experience a decline in life expectancy in recent years. Moreover, its the first time since 1963 that life expectancy has decreased in two consecutive years.

Even though 1/10th of a year of decline in life expectancy doesnt seem like a lot, it actually represents a lot of lives cut short, said Bob Anderson, chief of the Mortality Statistics Branch of the National Center for Health Statistics.

Leading causes of death

In another report issued Thursday, the center drilled down into drug overdose deaths between 1999 and 2016. Officials said there were 63,600 overdose deaths in 2016. Thats roughly the capacity of Brigham Young Universitys LaVell Edwards Stadium in Provo, and it represents a 21 percent increase in drug deaths since 2015.

The age-adjusted rate of drug overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids other than methadone (drugs such as fentanyl, fentanyl analogs, and tramadol) doubled between 2015 and 2016, from 3.1 to 6.2 per 100,000, the report said.

The report also identified the areas with the highest rates of drug overdoses in 2016: West Virginia, Ohio, New Hampshire, the District of Columbia and Pennsylvania.

Unintentional drug overdoses were largely responsible for a 10 percent increase in the number of unintentional injuries or accidents. In 2016, accidents replaced chronic lower respiratory diseases as the third leading cause of death, the report said. About one-third of unintentional injuries are drug overdoses, Anderson said.

But heart disease and cancer are still responsible for most of the 2,712,650 deaths that occurred in the U.S. in 2016.

Overall, the 10 leading causes of deaths remained the same, although the death rates declined in seven categories and rose in three.

In addition to the increase in accidents, death rates increased 3.1 percent for Alzheimers disease and 1.5 percent for suicide, the report said. There were 44,965 suicides in 2016, up from 44,193 in 2015.

And 116,103 deaths were attributed to Alzheimers disease in 2016, compared to 110,561 in 2015.

Good news was hard to find in the report, but one improvement came in the number of infant deaths.

In 2016, there were 23,161 deaths of children under the age of 1, 294 fewer than in 2015. The leading causes of death were the same; congenital malformation, low birth weight, sudden infant death syndrome, maternal complications and unintentional injuries lead the list.

Lost potential

While some people might be tempted to dismiss the decline in life expectancy as inconsequential because the change from 2015 to 2016 is so slight, Samuel Sturgeon, president of Demographic Intelligence, said even a small change can make a big difference in a country as big as the United States.

It sounds like a small amount, but when you extend that across 300 million people, the hardship starts to add up pretty quickly. And its not like the average 78-year-old is dying one month earlier. What this represents is a sufficient number of young people are getting 30 or 40, if not 50, years cut out of their lives," Sturgeon said.

A change in mortality among young adults also affects the country in other ways, from the psychological toll on parents who have lost an adult child to a reduction in the number of workers helping to provide services for seniors through those workers' taxes, he said.

An increase in drug deaths among people of child-bearing age can affect the country's birth rate, which is already approaching historic lows.

Demographically, we should be in the middle of a mini baby boomlet, just given the age of the population and the size of the millennials, but were not. I know this isnt (because of) death, but to me, theyre related," Sturgeon said.

"Were about to hit record low fertility for America most likely when the final 2017 data comes out. So whatever it is that is causing more drug use and suicide seems to be having a dampening effect on births as well."

Other factors

Anderson, of the National Center for Health Statistics, said drug overdose deaths have been increasing for more than a decade, but they didn't affect life expectancy until recently because of a steep decline in cardiovascular deaths that offset the overdose fatalities.

In the past few years, however, cardiovascular deaths have flattened while overdose deaths have gone up, allowing the deaths of younger Americans to impact overall life expectancy, he said.

Now its impacting the whole picture, the overall mortality, and thats quite significant, Anderson said.

I do think it is a crisis, and if we dont get a handle on the drug overdose situation, we could have even more years of declining life expectancy. And that really says the health of the United States isnt doing that well, he said.
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