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posted by Fnord666 on Sunday May 28 2017, @04:51PM   Printer-friendly
from the time-to-move dept.

According to a report by the Congressional Research Service (PDF hosted on Cloudflare; archived copy here),

Although life expectancy has generally been increasing over time in the United States, researchers have long documented that it is lower for individuals with lower socioeconomic status (SES) compared with individuals with higher SES. Recent studies provide evidence that this gap has widened in recent decades. For example, a 2015 study by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) found that for men born in 1930, individuals in the highest income quintile (top 20%) could expect to live 5.1 years longer at age 50 than men in the lowest income quintile. This gap has increased significantly over time. Among men born in 1960, those in the top income quintile could expect to live 12.7 years longer than men in the bottom income quintile. This NAS study finds similar patterns for women: the life expectancy gap between the bottom and top income quintiles of women expanded from 3.9 years for the 1930 birth cohort to 13.6 years for the 1960 birth cohort.

Apparently, all the advances in medical science and healthy living that occurred during this rolling 30-year interval were visited upon the rich a lot more than on the poor.

The American Prospect

According to a different study (open; DOI 10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.0918; archived copy here) in JAMA Internal Medicine,

[...] inequalities in life expectancy among counties are large and growing, and much of the variation in life expectancy can be explained by differences in socioeconomic and race/ethnicity factors, behavioral and metabolic risk factors, and health care factors.

In 2014, there was a spread of 20.1 years between the counties with the longest and shortest typical life spans based on life expectancy at birth.

NPR

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  • (Score: 2) by The Mighty Buzzard on Monday May 29 2017, @03:36PM

    Nice list.
    Computer? You had to go back to Babbage, I assume, because computing on silicon is U.S. top to bottom. Most relevant being the microprocessor and the personal computer upon which Linux runs.
    Linux itself? Love it but it started as a UNIX ripoff, so that's not particularly inventive. What's been done with it? That's not a product of geographic borders but worldwide collaboration (most of which comes from the U.S.).
    Insulin? That's all you've got for medical advancements? Would you like me to start listing off the many thousands of drugs and vaccines that would not have existed without U.S. capitalism? The underlying research done here? The devices invented here?
    Trains? That'd be the UK which was extremely capitalist at the time.
    Space exploration? Please. We have consistently kicked the shit out of the USSR/Russia in everything space related since 1963. Also the only properly socialist/communist nation to make your list.

    Seriously, your attempts to maintain this cognitive dissonance are pathetic. Just admit to yourself that capitalism creates things and socialism does not.

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