Natalie Wolchover provides an article that supports this notion using New York City as an example: Want to Live Longer? Move to NYC. She uses information provided by the University of Washington’s Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME).
"Manhattanites can now expect to live to the ripe old age of 82, and the average life expectancy across all five New York City boroughs is 80.6 years. That's three years beyond the national average, and a striking turnaround since the city's low point in 1990, when life expectancy there trailed the U.S. average by three years."
Most of the improvement in longevity can be attributed to improvement in individual health.
And how were these reductions attained? It required aggressive good-governance actions by city officials.
NCDs are not only life threatening, they are expensive to deal with because they often lead to chronic conditions that require continual medical care.
The IHME data base provides data on life expectancy at the state level and at the county level for each state up through 2009. It is interesting, and disturbing, to note the amount of variation that exists within the states. Utah has the highest value of 78.8 years, while Mississippi comes in last at 71.8 years. In general, the states with the highest life expectancy tend to be what might be described as "activist government" states. Utah seems to be an interesting exception. The poorest performers tend to be "small government" states, mostly located in the South.
Wolchover uses data provided by the CIA World Fact Book to locate the US as a whole at number 50 worldwide in life expectancy. If Mississippi were a country it would be ranked 133, just below the Philippines. In Quitman or Tunica Counties in Mississippi, where the life expectancy is a mere 66.1 years, the rank would be 166 and fall just below Pakistan.
While these numbers are a source of embarrassment, they should also remind us that poor health costs money, and the states that insist on the right to allow their citizens to die young, are really depending on a subsidy from the other states in order to maintain their bad habits.
Perhaps "big" government and "small" government are the wrong categories. How about "good" government?
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