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Why do Americans die younger than Britons?

By Tom Geoghegan BBC News, Washington DC

Blood pressure test

New life expectancy figures show Americans some way behind countries like

Canada, the UK and Australia. Why?

Living in the world's richest country comes at a price, and it's measured in

life years.

Graph

Men in the US are on average aged 75 when they die. That is 1.5 years younger

than men in the UK and 3.5 years younger than men in Australia, says a new

study.

American women live on average to just under 81 - about three years younger

than the average Australian woman.

While life expectancy in the US continues to improve, says the report by

researchers at University of Washington in Seattle and Imperial College,

London, it is not increasing as quickly as in other Western countries, so the

gap is widening.

"The researchers suggest that the relatively low life expectancies in the US

cannot be explained by the size of the nation, racial diversity, or economics,"

says the document, which ranks the US 38th in the world for life expectancy

overall.

"Instead, the authors point to high rates of obesity, tobacco use and other

preventable risk factors for an early death as the leading drivers of the gap

between the US and other nations."

Risk factors

smoking

obesity

high blood pressure

high low-density lipoprotein cholesterol

high dietary trans fatty acids

high salt intake

low dietary omega 3 fatty acids

high blood glucose

low intake of fruits and vegetables

alcohol abuse

physical inactivity

Source: University of Washington

"We weren't surprised that we had lower life expectancies than other countries,

but we were surprised by the fact that we were falling further behind," says Dr

Ali Mokdad, professor of global health at the Institute for Health Metrics and

Evaluation at the University of Washington.

Take a country like Australia, he says. "It also has a nation of immigrants. It

also is a relatively young country. It has similar socioeconomic

characteristics.

"It has an obesity problem, and yet it has continued to improve in life

expectancy and remains one of the healthiest nations in the world."

So how should the US address these risk factors?

Smoking alone is responsible for one out of every five deaths in the US, the

professor says, yet the US has not been as tough as Australia in restricting

tobacco advertising and public smoking.

Australia also has a greater focus on primary care - which helps with health

education, and early treatment of any problems - and it has done a good job

reducing the number of road traffic accidents, he adds.

The US could also save 100,000 lives a year by reducing salt in people's diets,

since high blood pressure kills one in six people, Dr Mokdad says.

Snapshot from Mississippi

Trailer in Mississippi

"We have high rates of poverty and high rates of uninsured or people lacking

access to care. We have fewer primary care providers and fewer physicians per

person than most states. And high rates of low education.

"We have the highest rate of obesity in the country and therefore one of the

highest rates of diabetes. A relatively high rate of tobacco use and high rates

of cardiovascular disease, stroke and cancer.

"It's going to take a long time to make progress, but we have 40 communities

that have banned indoor smoking in public buildings, and the percentage of high

school smokers is falling. In other ways, we are making being healthy an easier

choice."

Dr Mary Currier, Mississippi health officer

Then there's the big issue - about one in three adults is classified as obese.

That's about 10 times as many as in long-living countries like Japan, according

to OECD figures.

But the US is a big country, and while parts of Mississippi have a male life

expectancy of 67, behind nations like the Philippines, women in areas of

Florida live as long, on average, as the Japanese, who top the longevity

rankings.

It is precisely this kind of inequality that goes some way to explain why the

US - and the UK to a lesser degree - lag behind other countries, according to

Danny Dorling, a professor of human geography at the University of Sheffield in

the UK.

He believes a more even distribution of wealth, even if the average were lower,

could mean longer lives for everyone.

"I think stress is a part of it - this is the key thesis of Michael Marmot and

his book on the status syndrome. People get worn out faster with greater

inequality.

"However there is much more. If you have most health spending just going on a

few people who have the best health to begin with - [as in] the US system -

that is hardly efficient.

"In a more unequal rich country more doctors are working on things like plastic

surgery. More dentists whiten teeth than fix bad teeth and so on."

Infant deaths

While it is not surprising that poor Americans lose out from inequality, Prof

Dorling argues that the rich may suffer too.

Yukichi Chuganji, former world's oldest man Several of the world's oldest

people have been from Japan

"Top income groups are badly affected because their doctors are not necessarily

mainly interested in their health but work for organisations that have to make

an income," he says.

"I am not suggesting it is deliberate but you make more money out of a patient

who spends more on many drugs and investigatory operations than one who lives

longer with less intervention.

"In a more equal system the rich who are well get less intervention - and they

live longer in the UK than the US."

Growing income inequality in the UK, since the 1970s, has has helped to push it

down the European life expectancy rankings, says Mr Dorling.

However, life expectancy is not just about forecasts made for newborn babies.

When you look at life expectancy at 65, the US does perform well, says Svetlana

Ukraintseva, research scientist at the Center for Population Health and Aging

(CPHA) at Duke University in North Carolina.

Elderly Americans have a higher chance of surviving heart disease and many

cancers than their counterparts in other rich countries, she says. Where the US

lags behind is what happens at a much younger age. Infant mortality rates are

high, she points out.

"So it's not the medical system itself that is the problem but access to it,"

she says.

"Medical insurance for all might help."

This is one goal of the healthcare reform signed into law in March 2010, which

will oblige American adults to have health insurance when it comes into force

in 2014.

However, this remains a controversial idea in the US and the legislation could

yet come unstuck.

Challenges to the constitutionality of the law are working their way through

the courts, and fierce opponents in the Republican Party make no secret of

their desire to repeal the legislation if the opportunity arises.