A Yale University study published in the journal *Health Affairs* analyzed US life expectancy trends, focusing on the period between 1935 and 2020. The study reveals that public health advancements, particularly in controlling infectious diseases through antibiotics, vaccines, and sanitation improvements, significantly contributed to increased life expectancy gains, especially during the mid-20th century. These interventions reduced mortality rates from infectious diseases, leading to substantial improvements in overall health and longevity.
However, the study highlights a concerning trend of slowing life expectancy gains, and in some cases, declines, in recent decades. Researchers attribute this stagnation to chronic underfunding of public health initiatives and the subsequent rise in chronic diseases like heart disease, cancer, and diabetes. They argue that a shift in focus from infectious diseases to chronic disease prevention and management is crucial to reversing this trend.
The research emphasizes that neglecting public health infrastructure and prevention programs ultimately undermines the potential for further gains in life expectancy. The study calls for renewed investment in public health, including prevention, early detection, and management of chronic diseases, to improve population health and reverse the declining trajectory of life expectancy in the United States. The study implicitly links social inequality and disparities in access to healthcare as contributing factors to the stagnation and decline.
find the original article here: https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2025/07/01/zpps-j01.html
