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On Thu, 22 Jan 2004 15:45:08 +0000, Dick Locke wrote:
On 22 Jan 2004 06:19:10 -0800, (Pat Norton) wrote: Interesting. I've lived in Japan and by US standards their health care practice has some appalling aspects. I wonder though, to what extent the low US life expectancy reflects the health care system and to what extent it reflects a higher chance of dying young due to violence. Does WHO have any stats, say, on the life expectancy of 40 yr olds in various countries? That would reduce the violent-death factor. Infant mortality which is I believe high in the US has a significant contribution to these figures. So does diet. |
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devil wrote
Infant mortality which is I believe high in the US has a significant contribution to these figures. http://www.oecd.org/document/16/0,23..._1_1_1,00.html Infant mortality - Deaths per 1000 live births (year 2000) 3.0 Iceland 3.2 Japan 3.4 Sweden 3.8 Finland 3.8 Norway 3.9 Spain 4.1 Czech Republic 4.4 Germany 4.5 Italy 4.6 France 4.8 Austria 4.8 Belgium 4.9 Switzerland 5.1 Luxembourg 5.1 Netherlands 5.2 Australia 5.3 Denmark 5.3 Canada 5.5 Portugal 5.6 United Kingdom 6.1 Greece 6.2 Ireland 6.9 United States 8.1 Poland 8.6 Slovak Republic |
#4
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![]() "Dick Locke" wrote in message ... Interesting. I've lived in Japan and by US standards their health care practice has some appalling aspects. I wonder though, to what extent the low US life expectancy reflects the health care system and to what extent it reflects a higher chance of dying young due to violence. Personally I don't consider 77.3 years that low! Jarg |
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