Why did black life expectancy decline from 1984 through 1989 in the United States?
K D Kochanek,
J D Maurer and
H M Rosenberg
Mortality Statistics Branch, National Center for Health Statistics, Hyattsville, MD 20782.
OBJECTIVES. The objective of this study was to partition thechange in US life expectancy into those major causes of deathand age groups that contributed most to the decline in lifeexpectancy for Black males and females and to the increase inlife expectancy for White males and females in the period from1984 through 1989. METHODS. By means of a life table partitioningtechnique, the positive and negative contributions of age andcause of death to changes in life expectancy were estimated.RESULTS. Causes contributing most to the decrease in life expectancyfor Black males included human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)infection (< 5 and 20-69 years of age) and homicide (1-4and 10-34 years of age); for Black females the causes includedHIV infection (< 5 and 20-59 years of age) and cancer (65-79and > or = 85 years of age). CONCLUSIONS. Mortality trendsbetween the two major race groups in the United States divergedsharply, and without precedent, during the late 1980s. A descriptionof these trends in terms of contributions to change in lifeexpectancy may help us better analyze and interpret changesin the health of these groups and may contribute to a betterallocation of resources for research, education, and publichealth programs.
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