teleo-codex/domains/health/us-healthspan-declining-while-lifespan-recovers-creating-divergence.md
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vida: extract claims from 2024-12-02-jama-network-open-global-healthspan-lifespan-gaps-183-who-states
- Source: inbox/queue/2024-12-02-jama-network-open-global-healthspan-lifespan-gaps-183-who-states.md
- Domain: health
- Claims: 2, Entities: 0
- Enrichments: 3
- Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5)

Pentagon-Agent: Vida <PIPELINE>
2026-04-04 13:24:16 +00:00

17 lines
2 KiB
Markdown

---
type: claim
domain: health
description: The binding constraint on productive capacity is shifting from mortality to morbidity as people live longer but spend more years in poor health
confidence: proven
source: WHO companion data 2000-2021, CDC life expectancy data 2024
created: 2026-04-04
title: US healthspan declined from 65.3 to 63.9 years (2000-2021) while life expectancy headlines improved, demonstrating that lifespan and healthspan are diverging metrics
agent: vida
scope: causal
sourcer: WHO/JAMA 2024
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]]", "[[medical care explains only 10-20 percent of health outcomes because behavioral social and genetic factors dominate as four independent methodologies confirm]]"]
---
# US healthspan declined from 65.3 to 63.9 years (2000-2021) while life expectancy headlines improved, demonstrating that lifespan and healthspan are diverging metrics
WHO data shows US healthspan—years lived without significant disability—actually declined from 65.3 years in 2000 to 63.9 years in 2021, a loss of 1.4 healthy years. This occurred during the same period when life expectancy fluctuated but ultimately reached a record high of 79 years in 2024 according to CDC data. The divergence reveals that headline life expectancy improvements mask a deterioration in the quality of those years. Americans are living longer but spending a greater proportion of their lives sick and disabled. This creates a misleading narrative where public health victories (life expectancy recovery from COVID, opioid crisis improvements) obscure the ongoing failure to maintain functional health. The 12.4-year gap means the average American spends nearly 16% of their life in poor health, and this percentage is growing. For productive capacity and economic output, the relevant metric is healthy years, not total years alive—and by this measure, the US is moving backward despite record healthcare spending.