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European Union nations spend less on health care, but residents live longer than Americans.
A strong commitment to community-based primary care would help Americans live longer and better, according to a new report.
That recommendation is among ways to improve life expectancy in the United States, which lags behind other countries, despite the nation spending the most money on health care of any nation on earth. The new Commonwealth Fund report states the issue plainly in its title: “Americans, No Matter the State They Live In, Die Younger Than People in Many Other Countries.”
Researchers compared the 50 states, District of Columbia and other developed countries that are part of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). They compared two measures: average life expectancy and higher avoidable mortality, or deaths that could have been prevented with appropriate health care.
“We find that regardless of where they live, Americans are more likely to die earlier than people in many other countries,” the report said. “And they’re more likely to die from factors that could have been prevented with the right care provided at the right time.”
Average life expectancy for a newborn in the United States was 78.8 years. At least 16 other European Union (EU) nations, and 12 other non-EU nations, have longer life expectancies.
The figures are “disappointing, but not surprising,” the report said. Along with the commitment to primary care, researchers noted other countries offer health care with benefits to their citizens:
The figures represent rates from 2016 to 2019 and do not account for the COVID-19 pandemic that reduced life expectancy in the United States and other countries.
Here are the 17 OECD countries of the European Union that have life expectancies at birth, longer than the United States.