Houston Chronicle

In U.S., life expectancy drops a year due to virus

- By Marilynn Marchione

Life expectancy in the United States dropped a staggering one year during the first half of 2020 as the coronaviru­s pandemic caused its first wave of deaths, health officials are reporting.

Minorities suffered the biggest impact, with Black Americans losing nearly three years and Hispanics, nearly two years, according to preliminar­y estimates Thursday from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“This is a huge decline,” said Robert Anderson, who oversees the numbers for the CDC. “You have to go back to World War II, the 1940s, to find a decline like this.”

Other health experts say it shows the profound impact of COVID-19, not just on deaths directly due to infection but also from heart disease, cancer and other conditions.

“What is really quite striking in these numbers is that they only reflect the first half of the year … I would expect that these numbers would only get worse,” said Dr. Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, a

health equity researcher and dean at the University of California, San Francisco.

This is the first time the CDC has reported on life expectancy from early, partial records; more death certificat­es from that period may yet come in. It’s already known that 2020 was the deadliest year in U.S. history, with deaths topping 3 million for the first time.

Life expectancy is how long a baby born today can expect to live, on average. In the first half of last year, that was 77.8 years for Americans overall, down one year from 78.8 in 2019. For males it was 75.1 years and for females, 80.5 years.

Declines tend to signal grave societal problems, like the sharp drop in Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Declines in developed countries are rare, but the United States experience­d them from 2014 to 2017 as the opioid epidemic took its toll. Before that, demographe­rs had not seen an outright decline since 1993, during the AIDS epidemic.

As a group, Hispanics in the U.S. have had the most longevity and still do. Black people now lag white people by six years in life expectancy, reversing a trend that had been bringing their numbers closer since 1993.

Between 2019 and the first half of 2020, life expectancy decreased 2.7 years for Black people, to 72. It dropped 1.9 years for Hispanics, to 79.9, and 0.8 years for white people, to 78. The preliminar­y report did not analyze trends for Asian or Native Americans.

“Black and Hispanic communitie­s throughout the United States have borne the brunt of this pandemic,” Bibbins-Domingo said.

They’re more likely to be in front-line, low-wage jobs and living in crowded environmen­ts where it’s easier for the virus to spread, and “there are stark, preexistin­g health disparitie­s in other conditions” that raise their risk of dying of COVID-19, she said.

More needs to be done to distribute vaccines equitably, to improve working conditions and better protect minorities from infection, and to include them in economic relief measures, she said.

Dr. Otis Brawley, a cancer specialist and public health professor at Johns Hopkins University, agreed.

“The focus really needs to be broad spread of getting every American adequate care. And health care needs to be defined as prevention as well as treatment,” he said.

Overall, the drop in life expectancy is more evidence of “our mishandlin­g of the pandemic,” Brawley said.

“We have been devastated by the coronaviru­s more so than any other country. We are 4 percent of the world’s population, more than 20 percent of the world’s coronaviru­s deaths,” he said.

Not enough use of masks, early reliance on drugs such as hydroxychl­oroquine, “which turned out to be worthless,” and other missteps meant many Americans died needlessly, Brawley said.

“Going forward, we need to practice the very basics” such as hand-washing, physical distancing and vaccinatin­g as soon as possible to get prevention back on track, he said.

Researcher­s say Thursday’s numbers are important because they are a numeric representa­tion of the magnitude of the coronaviru­s crisis. They may not represent a trend that will continue in the future, but they speak volumes about the sheer scale of the suffering many American communitie­s are experienci­ng in the present.

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