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Death Declines During Depressions

—Photo by Dorothea Lange, courtesy Wikimdia Commons

People live longer during depressions. A new analysis in PNAS finds that life expectancy of Americans during the Great Depression increased by a whopping 6.2 years—from 57.1 in 1929 to 63.3 years in 1932. This was true for men and women of all races, all age groups, and all causes of death—except suicide.

The researchers analyzed mortality rates from the six most prevalent causes of death in the 1930s: cardiovascular and renal diseases; cancer; influenza and pneumonia; tuberculosis; motor vehicle traffic injuries, and suicide.

Health overall improved during the four years of the Great Depression, as well as during recessions in 1921 and 1938. Conversely, death rates rose during periods of strong economic expansion, such as 1923, 1926, 1929, and 1936-1937.

Why the counterintuitive results?

Well, the study didn't tackle this question. Though the researchers have a few hunches. All related to the fact that working conditions are different during economic expansions and recessions:

  • In expansions, firms are busy and typically demand a lot from employees, including overtime and a faster work pace. This creates stress, which is associated with more drinking and smoking. [Translation: They work you to death.]
  • In expansions, inexperienced workers are hired more likely to injure or kill themselves on the job.
  • People working a lot tend to sleep less, reducing overall health.
  • People working a lot eat more poorly. Either richer, fattier foods. And/or overworking crap food. [Might I add: more meat?]
  • In recessions, because there's less work, everyone works at a more relaxed pace. People sleep more.
  • In recessions, people feel, or are, poorer and spend less on alcohol and tobacco. [ Hmm. Not sure I agree with that one. The researchers are not bar-goers, is my guess.]
  • Economic upturns are associated with increases in atmospheric pollution, with its well-documented short-term effects on cardiovascular and respiratory mortality.
  • Economic expansion may increase social isolation and decrease social support because everyone's working so hard.

So, extreme ambition, cut-throat rivalry, pointless materialism, workalholicism, and general slavery to the almighty boss and his henchman the dollar is deadly to human life?
 

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Comments
Trippp

Why is this posted under 'science?'

This article seemed to be from the scientific realm but then it quickly turned into a polemic against, near as I can tell, big business and meat eaters.

I'm no dietician but I'm pretty sure I have read of studies with rats that showed rather conclusively that a near-starvation diet significantly extended the life of the rat. This was an interesting finding, and perhaps it explains what happened here in the US during our last depression?

Amongst we humans the difficulty with promoting a near-starvation diet is that, for some reason, most people do not seem to want to follow it. The people mumble on about quality versus quantity and things like that.

Frigging people. What are ya gonna do?

Tripp

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Counterintuitive?

Why is this counter-intuitive? Most of the food out there isn't healthy, and it's only saving grace is that it's expensive enough to make someone money. Tighter budgets mean water instead of coke, fruits and nuts instead of chips and candy, and stews instead of steaks.

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I'll second the "meat" suggestion

I'm not working now, am eating much less meat (and potato chips and candy bars...), and several chronic health issues I formerly had are gone.

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Researchers not bar-goers?

I've been unemployed since December and I'd dearly love to go to a bar, but I can't afford the inflated price of beer at a bar.
You're not unemployed, is my guess.

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Did they examine infant mortality?

I wonder how many of those longer-lived individuals in past depressions were people who survived childhood privation, and thus were physically more suited to survive adult privation.

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I've been through mild drepression lately. Please go and see a doctor and psychiatrist. Trust me. It helps. Maybe even a psychologist, too.

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