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Trends in Non-Hispanic White Mortality in the United States by Metropolitan-Nonmetropolitan Status and Region, 1990-2016

Author(s): Elo, Irma T.; Hendi, Arun S.; Ho, Jessica Y.; Vierboom, Yana C.; Preston, Samuel H.

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Abstract: The first decades of the twenty-first century have been a challenging period for American mortality. Life expectancy in the United States ranked 30th in the world in 2010 and is much lower than in other high-income countries (World Health Organization 2017). Between 2010 and 2016, US life expectancy fell further behind other developed countries, increasing by only 0.08 years, the smallest 5-year increase since 1970 (Ho and Hendi 2018). These relatively slow mortality declines occurred against a background in which US mortality in the 1990s and 2000s was already high by the standards of other OECD countries (Ho and Preston 2010; Crimmins et al. 2011; Ho 2013; Institute of Medicine and National Research Council 2013; Palloni and Yonker 2016). At the same time, there have been large and growing geographic and socioeconomic inequalities in health and mortality within the United States (Fenelon 2013; Wang et al. 2013; Hendi 2015, 2017; Chetty et al. 2016; Montez, Sasson, and Hayward 2016a).
Publication Date: Sep-2019
Citation: Elo, Irma T, Hendi, Arun S, Ho, Jessica Y, Vierboom, Yana C, Preston, Samuel H. (2019). Trends in Non-Hispanic White Mortality in the United States by Metropolitan-Nonmetropolitan Status and Region, 1990-2016. POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW, 45 (3), 549 - 582. doi:10.1111/padr.12249
DOI: doi:10.1111/padr.12249
ISSN: 0098-7921
EISSN: 1728-4457
Pages: 549 - 582
Type of Material: Journal Article
Journal/Proceeding Title: POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW
Version: Final published version. Article is made available in OAR by the publisher's permission or policy.



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