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Old 10-30-2015, 09:52 PM
 
23 posts, read 146,150 times
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A new study published in the Lancet for the first time offers a province-by-province breakdown of China’s health. The map displays life expectancy at birth for each of the 33 provincial-level regions, matched with the country that is most similar by this measure.
The study shows that a baby born in China in 1990 would live on average to the age of 68. One born in 2013 could expect to reach 76, beyond the age at which Confucius said “one can follow one’s heart’s desires—without crossing the line.” There is a large disparity between provinces, but the gap is narrowing. In Shanghai life expectancy is now 83—as good as Switzerland. People in six areas live longer than Americans. The most impressive progress has taken place in the most benighted regions: a child in Tibet born in 1990 had a life expectancy of 56, akin to one of the poorest African countries. This has risen to 70, roughly the same as Moldova, one of Europe’s poorer countries.
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Old 10-30-2015, 09:55 PM
 
23 posts, read 146,150 times
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6 areas: Shanghai, Beijing, Tianjin, Zhejiang, Hong Kong, Macau
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Old 10-31-2015, 07:37 AM
 
Location: Victoria TX
42,554 posts, read 86,954,125 times
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Why would that surprise anyone? Very low rates of obesity and poverty.

Urban areas always have higher longevity because everyone lives close to healch care access and diagnostic/medical standards are higher with more specialists nerarby. This report appears to be comparing the USA as a whole against a few of the higher performing population centers of China. Severa under-developed countries have higher life expectancy than the US (Cyprus, Costa Rica, Barbados) because of population being concentrated near large medical centers

Even Cuba has nigher life expectancy than the USA, but that is because their have government policies that place higher value on life and well-being, and wealth distribution that better addresses those most at risk. Maybe China does too.
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