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Why Is Life Expectancy1 Falling in US?
Suicides3 and drug overdoses are two reasons for a continuing decrease in how long Americans are expected to live.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported recently that there were more than 2.8 million deaths in the United States in 2017. Of those, 47,000 were suicides and 70,000 were drug overdoses.
If you want to understand why life expectancy is decreasing in America, the state of West Virginia may offer some answers.
A West Virginian story
Maggie Hill has lived in West Virginia for all of her life. Hill, who is 67, told the Associated Press about the many deaths in her family. An older brother drowned in a flood. A sister died in a house fire. Two siblings5, both who smoked, died of lung cancer. Two others died at birth. Her first husband died of heart failure.
Then there were the suicides. Two of her three sons shot themselves to death. Her second husband killed himself one Sunday morning while she was still in bed.
“I don’t think people have a lot to live for,” hill said. “I really and truly don’t see things getting better.”
Life expectancy
Dr. Michael Brumage is a public health expert at West Virginia University. He used to run the health department in Charleston, West Virginia. He said, “It seems that the worst outcomes7 happen here first.”
Among the 50 American states, West Virginia has the second- lowest life expectancy, behind only Mississippi. Hawaii has the highest life expectancy.
The nationwide drug overdose death rate today is what West Virginia’s was 10 years ago. In fact, West Virginia has had the nation’s highest rate of drug overdose deaths for several years.
The nation’s suicide2 rate today is where West Virginia’s was nearly 20 years ago.
West Virginia also has more people affected8 by diabetes9, heart disease and obesity10 than most other American states.
Ten years ago, the AP described the West Virginia city of Huntington as the unhealthiest place in America. The finding was based on health information from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The report led the city and the wider area to make changes to food served at schools. The area also made improvements to parks and sidewalks in an effort to fight obesity and related health problems.
As the city was trying to deal with its citizens’ weight problems, a new health crisis11 came to Huntington: opioid addiction12.
One summer day in 2016, emergency workers in Huntington treated 28 overdoses in six hours — including two deaths. The city later became known as America’s overdose capital.
There is hope
There are several new projects around the state that aim to get children to exercise and eat healthier foods.
Kayla Wright is director of an organization called Try This West Virginia. The organization is paying for many of the projects. She said, “We want to give people hope that we can be knocked off the unhealthiest list” of states. One program paid for high school students to build a running trail. Another helped people learn to grow a garden.
In Williamson County, local leaders — led by a young doctor named C. Donovan Beckett — developed a series of programs aimed at creating a culture of health.
They opened the Williamson Health and Wellness Center for free medical care. They set up a community garden, a vegetable delivery service and a running club. In the coming year, there will be a federally funded treatment program for people addicted13 to drugs.
One of the most successful programs is one that sends health workers to the homes of people with diabetes.
Jamie Muncy is one success story.
The 48-year-old lost his job and his marriage was in ruins. Last fall, he finally stopped taking opioids. He began taking the drug after he hurt his foot.
He told the AP, “I had no motivation” to be healthy. “I didn’t care.”
His weight went from 75 kilograms to 89 kilograms. He had high blood sugar levels. A doctor from Williamson Center put him on a special diet, connected him with a physical therapist and put him in the home-visit diabetes program.
Now Muncy walks 1.6 kilometer a day and buys vegetables at the farmers’ market. The changes to his everyday life have helped him bring his weight down to 66 kilograms.
As for Maggie Hill, the lifelong West Virginian, she adopted Charity, a young girl her son had been raising. He lost his right to raise Charity because of his continued struggle with drug addiction.
Charity has given Hill’s life a sense of purpose, she said.
Charity, who is 10, is a good student and hopes to go to college. If Charity does go away to college one day, Hill says she will move there with her.
I'm Ashley Thompson.
And I'm Jonathan Evans.
Words in This Story
overdose - n. an amount of drug or medicine that is too much and dangerous
sibling4 - n. a brother or sister
outcome6 - n. something that happens as a result of an activity or process
obesity - n. the problem of very fat
opioid addiction - n. a strong harmful need to use pain-killing drugs
knock off - v. to remove or stop something
fund - v. to provide money
1 expectancy | |
n.期望,预期,(根据概率统计求得)预期数额 | |
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2 suicide | |
n.自杀,自毁,自杀性行为 | |
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3 suicides | |
n.自杀( suicide的名词复数 );自取灭亡;自杀者;自杀性行为 | |
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4 sibling | |
n.同胞手足(指兄、弟、姐或妹) | |
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5 siblings | |
n.兄弟,姐妹( sibling的名词复数 ) | |
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6 outcome | |
n.结果,出口,演变 | |
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7 outcomes | |
结果( outcome的名词复数 ) | |
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8 affected | |
adj.不自然的,假装的 | |
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9 diabetes | |
n.糖尿病 | |
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10 obesity | |
n.肥胖,肥大 | |
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11 crisis | |
n.危机,危急关头,决定性时刻,关键阶段 | |
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12 addiction | |
n.上瘾入迷,嗜好 | |
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13 addicted | |
adj.沉溺于....的,对...上瘾的 | |
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