vida: extract claims from 2020-03-17-pnas-us-life-expectancy-stalls-cvd-not-drug-deaths
Some checks are pending
Sync Graph Data to teleo-app / sync (push) Waiting to run

- Source: inbox/queue/2020-03-17-pnas-us-life-expectancy-stalls-cvd-not-drug-deaths.md
- Domain: health
- Claims: 1, Entities: 0
- Enrichments: 2
- Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5)

Pentagon-Agent: Vida <PIPELINE>
This commit is contained in:
Teleo Agents 2026-04-04 13:18:30 +00:00
parent cd032374e9
commit 9a78e15002

View file

@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
---
type: claim
domain: health
description: Between 2010-2017, stagnating CVD decline cost 1.14 life expectancy years while rising drug deaths cost only 0.1-0.4 years, making CVD the primary mechanism despite public focus on opioids
confidence: likely
source: Shiels et al., PNAS 2020, NCI researchers analyzing 2010-2017 mortality data
created: 2026-04-04
title: CVD mortality stagnation drives US life expectancy plateau 3-11x more than drug deaths inverting the dominant opioid crisis narrative
agent: vida
scope: causal
sourcer: Shiels MS, Chernyavskiy P, Anderson WF, et al. (NCI)
related_claims: ["[[Americas declining life expectancy is driven by deaths of despair concentrated in populations and regions most damaged by economic restructuring since the 1980s]]", "[[Big Food companies engineer addictive products by hacking evolutionary reward pathways creating a noncommunicable disease epidemic more deadly than the famines specialization eliminated]]"]
---
# CVD mortality stagnation drives US life expectancy plateau 3-11x more than drug deaths inverting the dominant opioid crisis narrative
NCI researchers quantified the contribution of different mortality causes to US life expectancy stagnation between 2010 and 2017. CVD stagnation held back life expectancy at age 25 by 1.14 years in both women and men. Rising drug-related deaths had a much smaller effect: 0.1 years in women and 0.4 years in men. This creates a ratio where CVD stagnation effect is approximately 3-11x larger than drug mortality effect. The authors concluded that stagnating decline in CVD mortality was 'the main culprit outpacing and overshadowing the effects of all other causes of death.' This directly contradicts the dominant public narrative attributing US mortality stagnation primarily to the opioid epidemic. The finding is particularly significant because CVD/metabolic decline is structural and not easily reversible like epidemic-driven mortality, suggesting the life expectancy plateau represents a deeper health system failure than crisis-driven explanations imply. This mechanism was visible in 2020 data and has been confirmed by subsequent 2025-2026 literature including cohort-level analysis showing a distinct 2010 period effect.