The
Rich Live Longer Everywhere.
For the Poor, Geography Matters
“For poor
Americans, the place they call home can be a matter of life or death.
“The poor in some cities — big
ones like New York and Los Angeles, and also quite a few smaller ones like
Birmingham, Ala. — live nearly as long as their middle-class
neighbors or have seen rising life expectancy in the 21st century. But in
some other parts of the country, adults with the lowest incomes
die on average as young as people in much poorer
nations like Rwanda, and their life spans are getting shorter.
“In those
differences, documented in sweeping new
research, lies an optimistic message: The right mix of steps to
improve habits and public health could help people live longer, regardless of
how much money they make.
“One
conclusion from this work, published on Monday [April 11,2016]
in The Journal of the American Medical Association, is that
the gap in life spans between rich and poor widened from
2001 to 2014. The top 1 percent in income among American men live 15 years longer than the poorest 1
percent; for women, the gap is 10 years. These rich
Americans have gained three years of longevity just in this century. They
live longer almost without regard to where they live. Poor
Americans had very little gain as a whole, with big differences
among different places.
“The Richest
American Men Live 15 Years Longer than the Poorest 1 Percent
“But the
fact that some places have increased the life span of their poorest residents
suggests that improving public health doesn’t require first fixing the broader,
multidecade problem of income inequality. Small-scale, local policies to help
the poor adopt and maintain healthier habits may succeed in extending their
lives, regardless of what happens with trends in income
inequality.
“ ‘You
want to think about this problem at a more local level than you might have
before,” said Raj Chetty, a Stanford economist who is
the study’s lead author.
“
‘You don’t want to just think about why things are going badly for the poor in
America. You want to think specifically about why they’re going poorly in Tulsa and Detroit,’
he said, naming two cities with the lowest levels
of life expectancy among low-income residents.
“The
research, in the works for nearly three years and based on a vast trove of
records on earnings and deaths, is the most detailed analysis to date of a
pattern first identified at least a couple of centuries ago, that more money
translates into a longer life.
“It could
be as simple as this: Wealth buys higher-quality medical care, which
allows people to live into old age. But a long line of evidence, including the
new work, suggests it’s less obvious than it might seem. The affluent seem to
live in healthier ways. They exercise more, smoke less, feel less stress and
are less likely to be obese.
“It’s not
even certain that the cause and effect flows from higher income to greater
health; to some degree, it may go the other direction as well, because people
who are healthy are better able to hold down a demanding job, and so have
higher incomes.
“Geography
Matters More for the Poor
“The new
paper, in fact, finds little correlation between a region’s Medicare spending
rate or the proportion of the population with health insurance and how long its
poor citizens live.
“Public
health experts who examined the results said the weak relationship did not mean
that health insurance had no value. Research has long established that health
care interventions have a much smaller effect on life span than behavioral
factors like smoking and exercise. But health care does help people who are
already sick lead healthier lives. And it can provide economic security and peace of mind that improve the lives of the poor in
other ways.
“Economic
measures like the unemployment rate and income inequality also
showed little relationship to low-income people’s life spans. There was a much
stronger relationship between longevity and obesity and smoking rates,
which is unsurprising. Places where poor citizens had long life spans also
tended to have a high concentration of college graduates and high local
government spending.
“Life
expectancy for the poor is lowest in a large swath that cuts through the middle
of the country, and it appears in pockets in the rest of the country, in places
like Nevada. David M. Cutler, a Harvard economist and an
author of the paper, calls it the “drug overdose belt,”
because the area matches in part a map of where the nation’s opioid epidemic is concentrated.
“The new
findings dovetail with a much-discussed
paper by Anne Case and Angus Deaton published
last year. That research showed rising death rates among middle-age
white Americans, especially those with low education. It also
showed a sharp increase in drug and alcohol poisonings, suicides and accidents
in the first years of this century. Research from the Brookings
Institution published in February also
found a growing gap in life span between the
rich and the poor.
“ ‘There
is some deeper distress going on among white
middle-aged Americans that may continue to propel these mortality rates higher,” Mr. Deaton, a Princeton
economist who wrote an editorial critiquing
the new paper by Mr. Chetty and his colleagues, said in an interview. “If so, these people at the
bottom will live even less long than they’re calculating.”
“The great
question for public health officials is what strategies might help low-income
people live as long as their richer neighbors.
“ ‘There
is a very strong correlation between income and
life span,’ Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, director of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, said in an interview. ‘But it is
not inevitable. There are things we can do to change the life trajectory of
people. What improves health in a community? It includes wide access to social,
educational and economic opportunity.’
“A common
thread among many of the places with a smaller longevity gap was population
density, with wealthy cities leading the way. New York has a high rate of
social spending for low-income residents andhas been aggressive in regulating trans fats and smoking.
“In the
area in and around Birmingham, Ala., the life span for adults in the bottom
quarter of income rose 3.8 years for men and 2.2 years for women from 2001 to
2014. (Because people of different races have different life expectancies
regardless of income, the researchers statistically adjusted these local
numbers to simulate a world in which all places matched the racial composition
of the country as a whole. These numbers are after these race adjustments.)
“Dr. Mark E.
Wilson, chief executive of the health department in Jefferson County,
Ala., which includes Birmingham, ticked off a number of things that might
have helped.
“The
county expanded availability of preventive health care like vaccinations and
mammograms by opening clinics in poorer neighborhoods in the 1990s and early
2000s (though recently it has closed some of the clinics). Although a
relatively high percentage of the population lacks health insurance, a portion
of local taxes goes to hospital care for those who cannot pay. The county has
been ahead of the rest of Alabama in banning smoking in restaurants and
workplaces, with a law enacted in 2012. And philanthropic foundations backed by
old industrial money have funded campaigns to make people healthier in the Birmingham area.
“ ‘These
aren’t all huge-scale projects, but there is still an alignment of getting
resources moving in the same direction around health,’ Dr. Wilson said.
‘We’re trying to establish a culture of health and get it more and more on the
radar screen of our community.’
“Mr. Cutler, the Harvard
economist, argues that the new research should serve as a jumping-off
point. ‘Why is it that Birmingham has done well but Tulsa has done poorly?’ he
said.
“It may be
good to know that poor Americans are living a lot longer in some places than in
others, but it would be better to know — in terms of specific policy
prescriptions — how the places with better results are doing it.
Source: “The
Association Between Income and Life Expectancy in the United States, 2001-2014”,
The Journal of the American Medical Association;healthinequality.org. Contains charts, graphs, and sources.