U.S. life expectancy rose by 0.1 year in 2018 to 78.7, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported last week. Among specific improvements, the drug overdose death rate fell by 4.6% overall, to 20.7 per 100,000; and the infant mortality rate fell by 2.3%, to 566.2 per 100,000 live births. Death rates also decreased 2.9% for chronic lower respiratory diseases, 2.8% for unintentional injuries, 2.2% for cancer, 1.6% for Alzheimer disease, 1.3% for stroke, and 0.8% for heart disease; and increased 4.2% for flu and pneumonia and 1.4% for suicide.

“In 2018, for the first time in more than two decades, fewer Americans died of drug overdoses than the year before, and for the first time in four years, American life expectancy rose,” said Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar. “This news is a real victory, and it should be a source of encouragement for all Americans who have been committed to connecting people struggling with substance abuse to treatment and recovery.” 
 

Related News Articles

Headline
Boston Medical Center, a private, not-for-profit, equity-led academic medical center, is the winner of AHA’s 2024 Foster G. McGaw Prize for its leadership and…
Headline
Access to quality mental and physical health services can be a complex challenge, but for individuals of color and people with severe or chronic mental…
Blog
EnglISH¿Qué pasa si una conversación puede cambiar, o incluso salvar, una vida? Esa fue la pregunta que AdventHealth buscó responder, cuando el sistema de…
Blog
ESPAÑOLWhat if one conversation can change, or even save, a life? That was the question AdventHealth sought to answer, as the health system launched a…
Headline
Terry Fulmer, Ph.D., R.N., president of the John A. Hartford Foundation, explains in a new blog how its "4Ms" care model aligns with AHA's Patient Safety…
Headline
AHA and the Institute for Diversity and Health Equity released the fifth and final installment in its five-part DEI Data Insights series, which highlights…