Skip to main content

Again, Strange Maps: US Life expectancy

US life expectancy in 2000 was 77.1 years (obviously averaged for gender differences, but I wanted a fairly simple figure). We often see figures on life expectancy used in debates over health care, pointing out that the US has a fairly low life expectancy as far as industrialized nations go.

But what that leaves out is the wide regional variety in life expectancy across our nation.

Strange Maps (remember their map of state GDPs equated to foreign countries?) also has a map that equates the life expectancy in each state of the union with that of its nearest analog abroad.

All of you who are aficionados of Michael Moore's Sicko (and if you are, what are you doing here, anyway? gathering ammunition?) will recall that the fat boy grew positively rhapsodic about the better health care to be found in Cuba.

Which is a good thing for those of us who live in Delaware, I guess, since our life expectancy most closely equates with Castro's workers' paradise. The BAD NEWS is that Cuba and Delaware share a life expectancy of 76.2 years, almost a full year less than the US average.

It is good, apparently, to live in Minnesota, which shares with Australia a life expectancy of 79.8 years (the cold must freeze out the aging process), and not so good at all to live in Washington DC (which, like Lithuania, forecasts death at only 69.1 years).


Overall good news: no state got anywhere close to comparing to failed states in Africa, although the North Carolina-Czech Republic (74.5 years) and the South Carolina-Qatar (72.4 years) correlations should not be comforting to the citizens on either side of South of the Border.

Overall bad news: no State approached the 80.7 years of Japan, and certainly not the 83.5 years of Andorra. But on the other hand, I'll bet you couldn't find 83.5 people in the US who could locate Andorra in the first place. (Although now you can.)

Overall weird news: Missouri is not only the geographic population center of the country, it's also dead on the national average (OK, maybe "dead on" was infelicitous phrasing).

The map is below; click on it for a larger version; go here for an easily accessible life expectancy chart.

Comments

Hmmm- so moving from WA to SC means I lose 5.3 years' life expectancy? I's bettah gets on with mah lahf then.

Popular posts from this blog

Comment Rescue (?) and child-related gun violence in Delaware

In my post about the idiotic over-reaction to a New Jersey 10-year-old posing with his new squirrel rifle , Dana Garrett left me this response: One waits, apparently in vain, for you to post the annual rates of children who either shoot themselves or someone else with a gun. But then you Libertarians are notoriously ambivalent to and silent about data and facts and would rather talk abstract principles and fear monger (like the government will confiscate your guns). It doesn't require any degree of subtlety to see why you are data and fact adverse. The facts indicate we have a crisis with gun violence and accidents in the USA, and Libertarians offer nothing credible to address it. Lives, even the lives of children, get sacrificed to the fetishism of liberty. That's intellectual cowardice. OK, Dana, let's talk facts. According to the Children's Defense Fund , which is itself only querying the CDCP data base, fewer than 10 children/teens were killed per year in Delaw

The Obligatory Libertarian Tax Day Post

The most disturbing factoid that I learned on Tax Day was that the average American must now spend a full twenty-four hours filling out tax forms. That's three work days. Or, think of it this way: if you had to put in two hours per night after dinner to finish your taxes, that's two weeks (with Sundays off). I saw a talking head economics professor on some Philly TV channel pontificating about how Americans procrastinate. He was laughing. The IRS guy they interviewed actually said, "Tick, tick, tick." You have to wonder if Governor Ruth Ann Minner and her cohorts put in twenty-four hours pondering whether or not to give Kraft Foods $708,000 of our State taxes while demanding that school districts return $8-10 million each?

New Warfare: I started my posts with a discussion.....

.....on Unrestricted warfare . The US Air force Institute for National Security Studies have developed a reasonable systems approach to deter non-state violent actors who they label as NSVA's. It is an exceptionally important report if we want to deter violent extremism and other potential violent actors that could threaten this nation and its security. It is THE report our political officials should be listening to to shape policy so that we do not become excessive in using force against those who do not agree with policy and dispute it with reason and normal non-violent civil disobedience. This report, should be carefully read by everyone really concerned with protecting civil liberties while deterring violent terrorism and I recommend if you are a professional you send your recommendations via e-mail at the link above so that either 1.) additional safeguards to civil liberties are included, or 2.) additional viable strategies can be used. Finally, one can only hope that politici