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soryang

(3,306 posts)
Mon Feb 3, 2020, 10:38 AM Feb 2020

The Epidemic of Despair

The Epidemic of Despair
Will America’s Mortality Crisis Spread to the Rest of the World?
Foreign Affairs

By Anne Case and Angus Deaton February 3, 2020

Mortality rates in the United States fell through the last three quarters of the twentieth century. But then, in the late 1990s, the progress slowed—and soon went into reverse.

A major reason for the decline in life expectancy is increasing mortality in midlife, between the ages of 25 and 64, when the most rapidly rising causes of death are accidental poisoning (nearly always from a drug overdose), alcoholic liver disease, and suicide. Overdoses are the most prevalent of the three types of deaths of despair, killing 70,000 Americans in 2017 and more than 700,000 since 2000. The 2017 total is more than the annual deaths from AIDS at its peak in 1995 and more than the total number of U.S. deaths in the Vietnam War; the total since 2000 outstrips the number of U.S. deaths in both world wars. The U.S. suicide rate has risen by a third since 1999; there are now more suicides than deaths on the roads each year, and there are two and a half times as many suicides as murders. In 2017 alone, there were 158,000 deaths of despair, the equivalent of three fully loaded Boeing 737 MAX jets falling out of the sky every day for a year.


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https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/united-states/2020-02-03/epidemic-despair?utm_campaign=special-preview-020320-despair-case-deaton-registrants&utm_content=20200203&utm_medium=promo_email&utm_source=special_send&utm_term=registrant-prerelease
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The Epidemic of Despair (Original Post) soryang Feb 2020 OP
I doubt the malady will be exported to most developed countries Warpy Feb 2020 #1

Warpy

(113,130 posts)
1. I doubt the malady will be exported to most developed countries
Mon Feb 3, 2020, 06:12 PM
Feb 2020

as long as they keep their social welfare systems intact. Welfare here being well-being, not government giveaways, since people in those countries are well aware of how those systems are paid for.

We had few social welfare policies in place before the Reagan Revolution and now we have next to none since most weren't indexed to inflation and don't kick in even for the utterly indigent. We have homelessness and the knowledge that even people who are doing well are one accident of illness or loss of income away from joining them.

We're on our own, socialist paradise for the wealthy and dog-eat-dog capitalism for the rest of us and seeing so many of us break under the strain is no mystery.

As long as we're a country that prides itself on being rich while throwing its citizens out onto the pavement like garbage, we're going to see one hell of a lot of suicides.

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