2012 Heath Care Heroes Team

Joint Commission Seal

Children's Board Hillsborough County

Emergency Prepardness
Telephone
813.239.8561

Employee Email

Ask Joe

 

 


powered by centersite dot net
Aging & Geriatrics
Resources
Basic InformationMore InformationLatest News
Mediterranean Diet Preserves Cognition in the Aging BrainGlucosamine Supplements Tied to Risk of Eye ConditionAge Amplifies Damage From Obesity, Study FindsFitness in Middle Age May Help Shield Men From Cancer LaterGet Fit in Middle Age to Cut Heart Failure Risk, Study SaysOne in Eight Over Age 60 Reports Memory Loss, ConfusionMany Seniors Suffer Mental Decline in Silence: CDCLiving Long May Protect Against Early Alzheimer's, Study FindsOmega-3s No Help Against Age-Linked Eye Trouble: StudyVideo Games Improve Cognition in Older AdultsCentenarians a Happy Lot, Survey SaysNearly One-Third Don't Pick Up New Osteoporosis RxFor Some Seniors With Skin Cancer, Surgery Not Always Best ChoiceHealth Tip: Strengthen Your BonesSeriously Stressed? Hair Analysis Tells All, Study FindsExercise May Help People With Alzheimer's Avoid Nursing HomesStudy Questions Value of PSA Test for Older Men'Mobility Shoes' May Help Those With Arthritic Knees: StudyFew U.S. Seniors Take Advantage of Shingles VaccineElder Abuse Tied to Higher Hospitalization RatesFor Older Women, Missed Mammograms Tied to Worse Breast Cancer OutcomesCMS Announces Final Rates for Medicare Drug, Health PlansToo Few Americans Pass Last Days in Hospice Care: CDCSupplement Aids Age-Related Macular DegenerationIsolation, Loneliness May Raise Death Risk for ElderlyPneumonia May Lead to Serious Aftereffects for SeniorsBarrier Assessment Improves Care for Elderly With DiabetesA Third of U.S. Seniors Die With Dementia, Study FindsMammograms Every Other Year OK for Women Over 50: StudyGeriatric Factors Can Foretell Tolerances to ChemotherapyBathroom Visits May Add to Sleep Problems for SeniorsMany Elderly Consider Cancer Screening ObligatoryOver 50? Checklist May Predict If You'll Be Alive in 10 YearsCertain Sleep Aids May Raise Hip Fracture Risk in Nursing Homes: StudyHealthy Older Women Advised Against Taking CalciumFlu Vaccine Fell Short for Seniors This Season: CDCTwo Endocrine Disruptors Linked to OsteoarthritisDepression Affects Efficacy of Herpes Zoster VaccineNumber of Americans With Alzheimer's May Triple by 2050Flu Shot May Not Work as Well for SeniorsBoomers' Health Fails to Measure Up to Parents'A Good Mood May Boost Seniors' Brain PowerScientists Find Clue to Aging Reversal in MiceLighter Sleep May Dull Memory Skills in Seniors48 States Now Report Flu Activity, Elderly Hit HardDoctor Explains Why Flu a Greater Threat to SeniorsWinter Holds Many Hazards for Seniors, Expert WarnsAfter Hospital Discharge, Other Ills May Land Seniors Back in AgainDiet Drinks Tied to Depression Risk in Older Adults: StudyCostly Breast Cancer Screenings May Not Help Seniors: Study
Links
Related Topics

Depression: Major Depression & Unipolar Varieties
Elder Care
Lifespan Development

Increasingly, More Education Linked to Longer Lifespan in U.S.

HealthDay News
by -- Mary Elizabeth Dallas
Updated: Aug 7th 2012

 

new article illustration

TUESDAY, Aug. 7 (HealthDay News) -- Despite recent medical advances, the life expectancy of poor and less-educated Americans has increased only slightly over the past several decades, researchers say.

In some cases, life expectancy for people who don't finish high school is actually getting shorter, the new study found. Meanwhile, Americans with higher levels of education and more socioeconomic benefits are living much longer than they were in the 1950s and 1960s.

"There are essentially two Americas," the study's lead author, Jay Olshansky, a professor of epidemiology at the University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health, said in a university news release. "The most highly educated white men live about 14 years longer than the least-educated black men. The least-educated black women live about 10 years less than the most-educated white women," Olshansky explained.

"We must find a way to bring these subgroups of the population back into the present," he added.

In conducting the study, the researchers analyzed trends in life expectancy from 1990 through 2008. Specifically, they looked at how people's age, sex, race and education influenced their longevity.

The study revealed that Americans with less than a high school education have life expectancies similar to adults who lived 50 to 60 years ago.

"Over the last couple of decades, almost all longevity boats have risen, but there have been some subgroups that have had a drop in life expectancy," Olshansky noted. "It's as if Americans with the least education are living in a time warp. The least-educated black men are living in 1954, black women in 1962, white women in 1964 and white men in 1972."

White women who do not graduate from high school can expect to die five years sooner than other women with the same level of education did in 1990, the researchers were surprised to find.

The investigators also noted that black women with less than 12 years of education can expect to live until they are 74 years old, an increase of one year from two decades ago.

The authors pointed out that black women with the least amount of education are experiencing high levels of obesity, which may take a toll on their health. Less-educated white women, they speculated, might be harmed by behaviors such smoking as well as alcohol and drug use.

Education and socioeconomic status are key factors that play a role in life expectancy, the researchers said. They concluded that lifelong education is important to address the significant disparities in Americans' longevity.

The study was published in the August issue of Health Affairs.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides more facts and statistics on life expectancy.