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CDC: Life Expectancy Up for Blacks and the Racial Gap Is Closing

Valley News - 5/3/2017

The Washington Post

Since 1999, African-Americans have shown significant improvements in life expectancy and are now less likely to die at an early age. Both changes have helped to halve the longstanding mortality gap between white and black Americans, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported on Tuesday.

Blacks experienced a 25 percent drop in death rates, compared to a 14 percent decrease for whites, between 1999 and 2015. Deaths from heart disease, cancer and stroke declined sharply among blacks 65 and older, and in that age group, blacks now have lower death rates than whites, the CDC said.

But its report shows that the United States has a long way to go before it achieves health equity. Blacks in every age group under 65 continue to have significantly higher death rates than whites. Black life expectancy at birth is about 3½ years lower than that of whites.

“The disparity in deaths between black and white populations is closing,” Leandris Liburd, associate director of the CDC’s Office of Minority Health and Health Equity, said in a teleconference with reporters. “Even so, critical disparities remain.”

The CDC looked at multiple health and mortality trends among blacks and whites and found that, over the 17-year period, the racial disparity in “all-cause” mortality among whites and blacks had narrowed from 33 percent to 16 percent. The report does not address to what extent the change was affected by eroding health and rising death rates among midlife white Americans, much of which has been attributed to “diseases of despair” such as drug overdoses, suicide and alcohol-related liver diseases.

Embedded within the trends for African-American health are some troubling statistics. Although blacks are now far less likely to die of HIV than in 1999, they are seven to nine times more likely than whites to succumb to the disease. And blacks have seen no significant improvement in the rate of deaths from homicide during the period examined.

They still are far more likely than whites to live in poverty, be unemployed, and/or lack homeownership. They’re also more likely to report that they can’t afford medical care. Their obesity rate is higher.

At relatively young ages — in their 20s, 30s and 40s — blacks have relatively high death rates from diseases such as diabetes and heart disease that among whites are found more commonly at older ages, according to the report.