• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

Bass and Pratt will advance in L.A. mayoral race, traders say

June 2, 2026

Democrats seek more control over referenda in New York

June 2, 2026

Christians Living In Wealthy Florida Community Distrust Their New Neighbor Russell Brand

June 2, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Wednesday, June 3
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    Democrats seek more control over referenda in New York

    June 2, 2026

    Todd Blanche Says Trump Administration Is Ditching Weaponization Fund

    June 2, 2026

    Trump To Attend Second White House Press Corps Dinner After Assassination Attempt

    June 2, 2026

    Trump Doubles Down On Endorsing ‘Jerk’ Senator Despite Vowing To Never Back Him

    June 2, 2026

    Trump’s Ballroom Is Dead, And His Battleships Might Be Sunk

    June 2, 2026
  • Health

    Targeted Drug Shrinks Tumors In Hard-To-Treat Cancer

    June 2, 2026

    She Wasn’t Due For Her Colonoscopy. A Blood Test Found Cancer Anyway

    June 2, 2026

    Trump’s Most Favored Nation Drug Pricing Has Bold Aims, But Limited Impact

    June 2, 2026

    Ebola vaccine, Medicaid work requirements: Morning Rounds

    June 2, 2026

    How Hypnozan Quietly Became Britain’s Go-To Natural Sleep Aid

    June 2, 2026
  • World

    Ukraine Hits Russian Energy Targets, But Denies Striking Nuclear Plant

    June 2, 2026

    Singer Dua Lipa Ties Knot With Actor Callum Turner

    June 2, 2026

    Farage Vows £300m Increase for Police Taskforce Against Grooming Gangs

    June 2, 2026

    NC Police Officer Charged After Beating Caught On Camera

    June 2, 2026

    Bosnia Overwhelmed as Migrant Arrivals Jump 70 Percent in 2026

    June 2, 2026
  • Business

    First Quarter GDP Revised Downward As Voters Fret Over Economy

    May 28, 2026

    Cash Drain On Americans’ Savings Accounts Nears Great Recession Levels

    May 28, 2026

    US Voters’ Confidence In Economy Nosedives To Nearly 4-Year Low

    May 22, 2026

    Elon Musk On Track To Be World’s First Trillionaire After Latest Move

    May 21, 2026

    Major Cruise Lines Are On The Hook After SCOTUS Rules They Illegally Used Cuban Port Seized Under Castro

    May 21, 2026
  • Finance

    Bass and Pratt will advance in L.A. mayoral race, traders say

    June 2, 2026

    Best Wells Fargo credit cards for June 2026

    June 2, 2026

    Markets in ‘greed’ mode as AI firms ready IPOs

    June 2, 2026

    Why India Cannot Let the Rupee Float

    June 2, 2026

    Voyager Technologies to acquire Astrobotic Technology in up to $300M deal, expanding lunar ambitions

    June 2, 2026
  • Tech

    Meta’s Support Chatbot Helped Hijack High-Profile Instagram Accounts Including Obama White House

    June 2, 2026

    Luddites Weep as Scorsese and Spielberg Embrace AI

    June 2, 2026

    Anthropic Files Papers for Potential $1 Trillion AI IPO

    June 2, 2026

    Exclusive — PragerU Strikes Back After Big Tech and SPLC Attempt to Destroy Them

    June 2, 2026

    Data Breach Leaked Information of Nearly Six Million Customers

    June 2, 2026
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Health»Studies show ongoing toll of premature Black deaths
Health

Studies show ongoing toll of premature Black deaths

May 17, 2023No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Studies show ongoing toll of premature Black deaths
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

In the last two decades, Black Americans have suffered 1.63 million excess deaths and lost more than 80 million years of life compared to white Americans, according to a new analysis that is the first comprehensive attempt to quantify the impact of health disparities by tallying years of potential life lost.

The analysis showed improvement was made in narrowing long-standing health gaps between Black and white Americans between 1999 and 2011, but progress stalled through 2019. The Covid-19 pandemic, which disproportionately killed people who were Black, Hispanic, Native American, and Pacific Islander, then rapidly increased the number of excess deaths in Black populations.

The findings, published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Association by a group of physicians and health equity scholars, follow a number of studies confirming that health disparities cause Black Americans to die at younger ages than white Americans. The authors said they undertook the new analysis hoping to highlight just how large and horrific that toll has become and add urgency to efforts to end the crisis of premature Black deaths.

“Despite billions of dollars flowing into health care and a lot of rhetoric about health equity, we’re failing to make progress,” said Harlan Krumholz, a cardiologist and professor of medicine at Yale who directs the university’s Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation and was the study’s senior author. “It’s not understood as a national emergency.”

For years, veteran health equity scholar David Williams has likened the toll of premature Black deaths to a fully loaded jumbo jet falling out of the sky each day, and questioned why more has not been done. The new study similarly illuminates the depressing calculus of health disparities. “It’s grandmothers, fathers, loved ones, children,” said Krumholz. “We need to think about all these empty chairs at the dinner table. It’s a staggering loss.”

A separate paper in the same issue of JAMA estimated that the economic burden of health disparities on non-white racial and ethnic groups in America in 2018 was more than $400 billion. The number revises upward previous estimates of the cost of health disparities from $309 billion in 2006 and $320 billion in 2014. Seventy percent of that cost was borne by Black Americans, the study found, with two-thirds of the burden attributable to premature death, and the rest due to medical care costs and lost labor productivity.

See also  Morgan Freeman says Black History Month and African-American term is insult

“These findings provide a clear and important message,” wrote Harvard School of Public Health scholars Rishi Wadhera and Issa Dahabreh in an accompanying editorial arguing there may be an economic, as well as a moral, imperative to invest in curbing the nation’s massive racial and ethnic health disparities.

The new analysis on excess deaths rebuts those who dismiss the heavy loss of life in Black communities as being due predominantly to crime, accidents, or firearm injury. “A lot of it is traditional causes like heart disease and cancer,” Krumholz said.

The authors said their work also makes clear there is no underlying biological mechanism to explain racial differences in life expectancy. They said the early deaths were due to other factors linked to race, such as access to healthy food, stable housing, quality health care, and economic opportunity. Investing in these “is simply a smart strategy to improve the health of all residents,” Marcella Nunez-Smith, a physician, associate dean of health equity research at the Yale School of Medicine, and study co-author, told STAT. “We do fundamentally know what communities need to be healthy.”

Krumholz said investments in tackling structural racism in medicine were as critical as those made in the fight against cancer. “It’s an enormous opportunity to save lives,” he said.

The study found nearly a million excess deaths occurred in Black males between 1999-2020 while more than 600,000 occurred in Black females. The excess mortality rate among the Black males declined from 404 to 211 deaths per 100,000 people between 1999-2011, plateaued between 2011-2019, and jumped to 395 in 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic. For Black females, excess death rates declined from 224 deaths per 100,000 people in 1999 to 87 in 2015, and then rose in 2020 to 192 deaths.

See also  New Covid Variant Causing Pink Eye

While it is clear why excess deaths increased during the pandemic, the study did not provide specific reasons for the improvements seen in Black populations starting around 1999 or explain why that progress stalled after 2011. Some authors suggested that health improvements may have been tied to a stronger overall economy, but said more analysis was needed. The authors did not analyze excess death rates in other hard-hit populations such as Hispanics or Native Americans, but hope to do so in the future, Krumholz said.

The analysis found the brunt of excess deaths in Black communities was due to the loss of infants and older Americans, and that a leading cause of excess mortality, in addition to heart disease and cancer, was infant mortality.

Clyde Yancy, a study co-author, professor of medicine and the vice dean of diversity and inclusion at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, called the findings “both sobering and disheartening.”

“Now is the time to address health equity and to especially consider candidate root causes including the intersection of health and the community and the pernicious burden of bias,” he told STAT.

Yancy said it was “particularly onerous” to see the loss of modest progress made some two decades ago and to see life expectancy differences of decades between Black and white Americans existing in the same city.

He also lamented the fact that, as STAT has reported, so little progress has occurred in the 20 years following release of the National Institute of Medicine’s landmark “Unequal Treatment” report on the root causes of health disparities.

See also  Mindfulness Makes Some People Selfish—See If You Are One Of Them

Lisa Cooper, a professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University who leads the university’s Center for Health Equity and has worked in the field since the mid-1990s, has written numerous commentaries on the staggering death toll in Black communities, due to Covid-19 and health disparities.

“It’s so sobering and alarming that we had improvement and it just ebbed away,” she said of the findings. “It’s one thing to know in a general sense things are bad, but to see how bad it is over time, in such specific ways, is important.”

She said tracking excess deaths on an annual or quarterly basis as the new study did could provide a powerful tool to track progress — or the lack of it — in ending health disparities and said she hoped scholars would look to the new work to determine if there were specific programs, regions, events, or economic circumstances that had led to improvements that could be replicated.

Cooper said much research, including her own, has shown that various interventions, including programs that offer nutritional coaching and access to better food, can prevent hypertension and curb deaths from heart disease, which is largely preventable. “We know something like that can work,” she said. “We have interventions. The question is, how do we scale those up? And who’s going to pay for it?”

Despite the distressing numbers and the fact that earlier progress was “fleeting and fragile,” Nunez-Smith said she remained optimistic that change could occur and that the distressing death toll among Black Americans would be seen as unacceptable to society at large. “We have lost artists, scientists, spiritual leaders, teachers, friends,” she said. “This should be a call to action for us as a nation.”

This story was updated to clarify a comment made by Krumholz.

Black deaths Ongoing premature show studies Toll
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Targeted Drug Shrinks Tumors In Hard-To-Treat Cancer

June 2, 2026

She Wasn’t Due For Her Colonoscopy. A Blood Test Found Cancer Anyway

June 2, 2026

Trump’s Most Favored Nation Drug Pricing Has Bold Aims, But Limited Impact

June 2, 2026

Ebola vaccine, Medicaid work requirements: Morning Rounds

June 2, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Practicing Proactive Wellness Through Empowering Authors

March 29, 2023

Nashville Students Walkout And Lead 7,000 Person Protest Demanding Action On Guns

April 4, 2023

Johnny Manziel Says He Never Watched Film During His Time with the Browns

August 10, 2023

Julian Sands, ‘A Room with a View,’ ‘Ocean’s Thirteen’ Star Confirmed Dead in January Hiking Accident on Mount Baldy

July 1, 2023
Don't Miss

Bass and Pratt will advance in L.A. mayoral race, traders say

Finance June 2, 2026

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass (L) and Los Angeles mayoral candidate Spencer Pratt.Los Angeles Times…

Democrats seek more control over referenda in New York

June 2, 2026

Christians Living In Wealthy Florida Community Distrust Their New Neighbor Russell Brand

June 2, 2026

Former MMA’er Josh Longood Restrains Man After He Allegedly Assaults Flight Attendant, Attempts To Open Emergency Exit

June 2, 2026
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,371)
  • Entertainment (4,857)
  • Finance (3,627)
  • Health (2,184)
  • Lifestyle (1,890)
  • Politics (3,423)
  • Sports (4,370)
  • Tech (2,200)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (4,694)
Our Picks

Jimmy Buffett, ‘Margaritaville’ Singer, Dead At 76

September 2, 2023

Binance could lay off thousands in response to DOJ probe: source

July 15, 2023

Cuban Teens Say Russian Construction Job ‘Scam’ Landed Them in Ukraine War

September 3, 2023
Popular Posts

Bass and Pratt will advance in L.A. mayoral race, traders say

June 2, 2026

Democrats seek more control over referenda in New York

June 2, 2026

Christians Living In Wealthy Florida Community Distrust Their New Neighbor Russell Brand

June 2, 2026
© 2026 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.