The Province

U.S. life span down due to suicides

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NEW YORK — Suicides and drug overdoses pushed up U.S. deaths last year, and drove a continuing decline in how long Americans are expected to live.

Overall, there were more than 2.8 million U.S. deaths in 2017, or nearly 70,000 more than the previous year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday.

It was the most deaths in a single year since the government began counting more than a century ago.

The increase partly reflects the nation’s growing and aging population.

But it’s deaths in younger age groups — particular­ly middle-aged people — that have had the largest impact on calculatio­ns of life expectancy, experts said.

“These sobering statistics are a wake-up call that we are losing too many Americans, too early and too often, to conditions that are preventabl­e,” Dr. Robert Redfield, the CDC’s director, said in a statement.

The suicide death rate last year was the highest it has been in at least 50 years, according to U.S. government records. There were more than 47,000 suicides, up from a little under 45,000 the year before.

For decades, U.S. life expectancy was on the upswing, rising a few months nearly every year.

Now it’s trending the other way: It fell in 2015, stayed level in ’16, and declined again last year, the CDC said.

The nation is in the longest period of a generally declining life expectancy since the late 1910s, when the First World War and the worst flu pandemic in modern history combined to kill nearly 1 million Americans.

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