美国人的预期寿命与其同类相比如何
How American Life Expectancy Compares To Its Peers

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/how-american-life-expectancy-compares-its-peers

最近彼得森-凯瑟基金会(Peterson-KFF)的分析显示,美国的预期寿命正在落后于其他发达国家。几十年来,美国与同等国家水平相当,但现在差距显著拉大了。 将美国数据与11个可比国家(澳大利亚、奥地利、比利时、加拿大、法国、德国、日本、荷兰、瑞典、瑞士和英国)的平均数据进行比较,该分析表明差距正在扩大。虽然这些国家预期寿命仍在继续增长,但美国却停滞不前,甚至在近年来有所下降。 尽管美国的人均医疗支出(2023年为13432美元)大大高于可比国家组(7393美元),但其预期寿命却更低。这表明美国医疗体系存在效率低下和医疗资源分配不均的问题。一个关键因素是慢性病发病率的上升,例如肾脏疾病,在美国的人均死亡率明显高于同等国家。


原文

For decades, Americans could expect to live about as long as their peers in other wealthy countries... but today, that story is changing.

Based on a 2025 analysis by Peterson-KFF, American life expectancy is now lagging significantly behind comparable nations, with the gap growing wider than ever before.

From chronic diseases to healthcare disparities, multiple factors are contributing to Americans dying younger. In this infographic, Visual Capitalist's Marcus Lu takes a look at how the U.S. stacks up—and how quickly it’s falling behind.

The data we used to create this graphic is included in the table below.

The comparable country group is based on averages across 11 nations: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK.

YearU.S. (yrs)Comparable Country
Average (yrs)
198073.774.6
198174.174.8
198274.575.1
198374.675.3
198474.775.7
198574.775.7
198674.776
198774.976.4
198874.976.5
198975.176.7
199075.476.9
199175.577.1
199275.877.3
199375.577.4
199475.777.8
199575.877.8
199676.178.1
199776.578.4
199876.778.6
199976.778.7
200076.879
20017779.3
20027779.4
200377.279.5
200477.680.1
200577.680.2
200677.880.6
200778.180.8
200878.281
200978.581.2
201078.781.4
201178.781.6
201278.881.6
201378.881.8
201478.982.1
201578.781.9
201678.782.2
201778.682.3
201878.782.3
201978.882.6
20207782
202176.482.2
202277.582.2
202378.482.5

Higher Spending, Lower Life Expectancy

According to Peterson-KFF, the U.S. has the lowest life expectancy among large, wealthy countries despite outspending its peers on healthcare.

In 2023, health spending per capita in the U.S. climbed to $13,432, versus $7,393 for the same 11 nation peer group.

This disconnect suggests inefficiencies, unequal access, and other systemic problems in the U.S. healthcare system are preventing resources from translating into longer, healthier lives.

Chronic Diseases Drag American Life Expectancy Down

A key factor behind the stagnation of life expectancy in the U.S. is the rising prevalence of chronic diseases.

This includes kidney disease, which in 2021 claimed 41 lives per 100,000 in the U.S., versus just 28 per 100,000 for the comparable country group.

If you’re enjoying our content, check out this graphic showing global obesity projections by 2050 on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Loading...

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com