- cross-posted to:
- longevity@mander.xyz
- cross-posted to:
- longevity@mander.xyz
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Researcher David Atance of Universidad de Alcalá, Spain, and his team gathered data on the trends of the past.
Some groups have had it harder than others because of factors such as war, poverty, natural disasters, or disease, but the researchers found that morality and longevity trends are becoming more similar regardless of disparities between sexes and locations.
Along with a weak health care system, the factors that gave most African countries a high mortality rate were still just as problematic in 2010.
Deaths in those countries were attributed to violence, accidents, cardiovascular disease, alcohol, an inadequate healthcare system, poverty, and psychosocial stress.
They fall into one of the middle-income, mid-longevity clusters and will most likely be joined by some Latin American countries that were once in a higher bracket but presently face high levels of homicide, suicide, and accidents among middle-aged males.
Whether the US will stay in that top longevity bracket is also unsure, especially if maternal death rates keep rising and there aren’t significant improvements made to the health care system.
The original article contains 942 words, the summary contains 174 words. Saved 82%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!