By MIKE STOBBE, AP MEDICAL WRITER
NEW YORK — May 23, 2018, 3:34 PM ET
The U.S. death rate rose last year, and 2017 likely will mark
the third straight year of decline in American life expectancy, according to
preliminary data.
Death rates rose for Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, flu and pneumonia, and three other leading
causes of death, according to numbers posted online Wednesday by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
Full-year data is not yet available for drug overdoses, suicides
or firearm deaths. But partial-year statistics in those categories showed
continuing increases.
Just as important, there was little change in the death rate
from the nation's No. 1 killer: heart disease. In the past, steady annual drops
in heart disease death rates offset increases in other causes. But that offset
is no longer happening, experts say.
The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics calculated the
preliminary rates based on a first-pass review of death certificates filed last
year. There typically are delays in the filing of paperwork for causes of death
that involve police investigations.
A more complete report is expected around the end of the year,
including the number of deaths and a calculation of life expectancy — the
average lifespan based on year of birth, current death trends and other
factors.
For decades, life expectancy increased, rising a few months
nearly every year. But 2016 was the second year in a row in U.S. life
expectancy fell, a rare event that had occurred only twice before in the last
century.
Health officials say there was one three-year decline. That
occurred in 1916, 1917 and 1918, a period that included the worst flu pandemic
in modern history.
"Looking at these numbers, it seems likely" the nation
has just tied that record, said Anne Case, a Princeton University researcher
who's done influential work on deaths in middle-aged white Americans from
suicides, drug overdose and alcohol abuse.
The overall death rate rose a little less than 1 percent, to
about 734 deaths per 100,000 people. The rate dipped slightly in 2016 despite a
record number of deaths that year, so its rise in 2017 is more reason to expect
life expectancy will worsen, Case said.
There was some good news.
The death rate for cancer, the nation's No. 2 killer, continued
to drop. It fell 2 percent from 2016. Death rates from HIV and blood infections also declined.
The heart disease death rate fell too, but only by 0.3 percent.
Experts think the nation's increasing obesity rate is probably a factor in the
flattening of heart disease death rates.
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The Associated Press Health &
Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of
Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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