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Title: Where, how you live affects length of life
LAURAN NEERGAARD

WASHINGTON - Asian-American women living in Bergen County, N.J., lead the nation in longevity, typically reaching their 91st birthdays. Worst off are American Indian men in swaths of South Dakota, who die around age 58 - three decades sooner. 
 
Where you live, combined with race and income, plays a huge role in the nation's health disparities, differences so stark that a report issued Monday contends it's as if there are eight separate Americas instead of one. 
 
Millions of the worst-off Americans have life expectancies typical of developing countries, concluded Dr. Christopher Murray of the Harvard School of Public Health. 
 
Asian-American women can expect to live 13 years longer than low-income black women in the rural South, for example. That's like comparing women in wealthy Japan with those in poverty-ridden Nicaragua. 
 
Compare those longest-living women to inner-city black men, and the life-expectancy gap is 21 years. That's similar to the life-expectancy gap between Iceland and Uzbekistan. 
 
Health disparities are widely considered an issue of minorities and the poor being unable to find or afford good medical care. Murray's county-by-county comparison of life expectancy shows the problem is far more complex, and that geography plays a crucial role. 
 
"Although we share in the U.S. a reasonably common culture ... there's still a lot of variation in how people live their lives," said Murray, who reported initial results of his government-funded study in the online science journal PLoS Medicine. 
 
Consider: The longest-living whites weren't the relatively wealthy, which Murray calls "Middle America." 
 
They're edged out by low-income residents of the rural Northern Plains states, where the men tend to reach age 76 and the women 82. 
 
Yet low-income whites in Appalachia and the Mississippi Valley die four years sooner than their Northern neighbors. 
 
He cites American Indians as another example. Those who don't live on or near reservations in the West have life expectancies similar to whites'. 
 
"If I were living in parts of the country with those sorts of life expectancies," Murray said, "I would want ... to be asking my local officials or state officials or my congressman, 'Why is this?' " 
 
This more precise measure of health disparities will allow federal officials to better target efforts to battle inequalities, said Dr. Wayne Giles of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which helped fund Murray's work. 


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