(Press-News.org) Poverty has long been linked to shorter lives. But just how many deaths in the United States are associated with poverty? The number has been elusive – until now.
UC Riverside paper published Monday in the Journal of the American Medical Association associated poverty with an estimated 183,000 deaths in the United States in 2019 among people 15 years and older. 
This estimate is considered conservative because the data is from the year just prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, which caused spikes in deaths worldwide and continues to take its toll.
The analysis found that only heart disease, cancer, and smoking were associated with a greater number of deaths than poverty. Obesity, diabetes, drug overdoses, suicides, firearms, and homicides, among other common causes of death, were less lethal than poverty. 
“Poverty kills as much as dementia, accidents, stroke, Alzheimer's, and diabetes,” said David Brady, the study’s lead author and a UCR professor of public policy. “Poverty silently killed 10 times as many people as all the homicides in 2019. And yet, homicide firearms and suicide get vastly more attention.” 
Another finding is that people living in poverty – those with incomes less than 50% of the U.S. median income -- have roughly the same survival rates until they hit their 40s, after which they die at significantly higher rates than people with more adequate incomes and resources.
The analysis estimated the number of poverty deaths by analyzing income data kept by the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan and death data from household surveys from the Cross-National Equivalent File. Deaths reported in surveys were validated in the National Death Index, a database kept by the National Center for Health Statistics, which tracks deaths and their causes in the U.S.
Their findings have major policy implications, the researchers say.
“Because certain ethnic and racial minority groups are far more likely to be in poverty, our estimates can improve understanding of ethnic and racial inequalities in life expectancy,” the paper reads.
Additionally, the study shows that poverty should get more attention from policymakers, said Brady, the director of UCR’s Blum Initiative on Global and Regional Poverty.
Beyond the emotional suffering of surviving family members and friends, deaths are associated with a great economic cost. Experts agree that a death is expensive for a family, community and government, Brady said.
“If we had less poverty, there'd be a lot better health and well-being, people could work more, and they could be more productive,” Brady said. “All of those are benefits of investing in people through social policies.”
The paper is titled “Novel Estimates of Mortality Associated With Poverty in the US.” In addition to Brady, study authors include Professor Ulrich Kohler at the University of Potsdam, Germany, and Professor Hui Zheng at Ohio State University in Columbus. 
 
 END
Poverty is the fourth greatest cause of U.S. deaths, analysis published in JAMA finds.
Only heart disease, cancer and smoking kill more Americans
2023-04-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Steering phase-separated droplets to control mechanical properties of supramolecular peptide hydrogels
2023-04-17
Self-assembled peptide supramolecular hydrogels have shown great application prospects in various areas, including tissue engineering, drug delivery, and biosensing.
Precisely and flexibly controlling the mechanical properties of peptide hydrogels to match the targeted applications is important. The common methods to regulate the mechanical properties of supramolecular hydrogels generally include: changing the formula (different peptide sequences, adding cross-linking agents) or changing the environmental conditions (concentration, temperature, pH and ions), both of which inevitably change the chemical composition of the ...
Facile synthesis of high-performance perovskite oxides for acid–base catalysis
2023-04-17
Bifunctional acid−base catalysts are highly desirable for industrially relevant chemical processes. Owing to their ability to activate electrophiles and nucleophiles simultaneously, they allow the catalysis to proceed synergistically and cooperatively. Solid acid−base catalysts are particularly advantageous since they are reusable and result in no waste products. However, controlling the structure of such catalysts for cooperatively workable active sites is challenging. Simple and effective methods that enable the synthesis of high-performance solid acid−base ...
Quantum light source goes fully on-chip, bringing scalability to the quantum cloud
2023-04-17
An international team of researchers from Leibniz University Hannover (Germany), the University of Twente (Netherlands), and the start-up company QuiX Quantum has presented an entangled quantum light source fully integrated for the first time on a chip. “Our breakthrough allowed us to shrink the source size by a factor of more than 1000, allowing reproducibility, stability over a longer time, scaling, and potentially mass-production. All these characteristics are required for real-world applications such as quantum processors,” says Prof. Dr. Michael Kues, head of the Institute ...
Lipid molecules help to get stroke therapies into the brain
2023-04-17
Researchers from Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU) find that, when a stroke therapy is linked to a specific kind of lipid and injected into the blood, it is taken up preferentially in the stroke-lesioned brain 
 
Tokyo, Japan – To get therapies into the brain after a stroke, researchers are increasingly making use of the blood–brain barrier, which allows only certain molecules to pass from the blood into the brain. In a study published earlier this year in Molecular Therapy, ...
Ben-Gurion University researcher and colleagues pen 10 simple rules for socially responsible science
2023-04-17
BEER-SHEVA, Israel, April 17, 2023 – Scientific research must meet clear ethical guidelines to prevent harm to participants. However, research can also indirectly harm individuals and social groups, for example by shaping social perceptions and inspiring policy. Researchers receive little to no training on how to consider and minimize such harm.
To that end, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev's Dr. Niv Reggev and his international colleagues have published ten simple rules for socially responsible science. The ...
New approach estimates long-term coastal cliff loss
2023-04-17
In parts of California’s iconic mountainous coasts, breathtaking beauty is punctuated by brusque signs warning spectators to stay back from unstable cliffs. The dangers of coastal erosion are an all-too-familiar reality for the modern residents of these communities. Now, with a new tool, researchers are bringing historical perspective to the hotly debated topic of how to manage these disappearing coastlines.
Using a model that incorporates measurements of the amount of time coastal cliffs and their remnant deposits were exposed at the Earth’s surface, Stanford researchers found that the rate of cliff erosion in the past 100 years is ...
Long Covid smell loss linked to changes in the brain
2023-04-17
People living with long Covid who suffer from loss of smell show different patterns of activity in certain regions of the brain, a new study led by UCL researchers has found.
The research used MRI scanning to compare the brain activity of people with long Covid who lost their sense of smell, those whose smell had returned to normal after Covid infection, and people who had never tested positive for Covid-19.
Published in eClinicalMedicine, the observational study found that the people with long Covid smell loss had reduced brain activity and impaired communication between two parts of the brain which process ...
Southwest Research Institute’s automotive engineering expertise on display at SAE International’s WCX™ 2023
2023-04-17
SAN ANTONIO — April 17, 2023 —Southwest Research Institute staff members have converged upon Detroit this week to share their respective expertise with the mobility industry at the 2023 SAE International WCX™ World Congress Experience.
WCX is the “largest technical mobility event developed by the industry, for the industry,” according to SAE. The conference, which takes place April 17-20, invites mechanical, electrical and software engineers working in mobility from around the world to share knowledge and research to overcome the latest challenges facing the industry.
As leaders in mobility and automotive research, ...
Adapting apples to the times
2023-04-17
Through careful crossbreeding and selection, University of Maryland researchers have developed what may just be the perfect apples for American growers trying to adapt to a changing world. The two new apples, a yellow and a red one are heat-tolerant, blight-tolerant, low-maintenance, easy to harvest and not least, delicious-tasting. Both have been approved for patents and are awaiting the final grant from the U.S. Patent Office.
They address a growing suite of problems the apple industry has been grappling with. The fruit has always been labor-intensive to bring to market, with trees that need to be trained, pruned, ...
Extended monitoring detects more arrhythmias in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
2023-04-17
Barcelona, Spain – 17 April 2023:  Thirty day electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) detects more arrhythmias than the standard 24 to 48 hours, according to late breaking science presented at EHRA 2023, a scientific congress of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).1
 
Up to 20% of patients with HCM develop atrial fibrillation during the course of the disease2,3 and are at particularly high risk of stroke. Therefore, guidelines do not recommend the CHA2DS2-VASc score4 to calculate stroke risk but advise starting anticoagulant treatment in all patients with HCM ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Controlling next-generation energy conversion materials with simple pressure
More than 100,000 Norwegians suffer from work-related anxiety
The American Pediatric Society selects Dr. Harolyn Belcher as the recipient of the 2026 David G. Nichols Health Equity Award
Taft Armandroff and Brian Schmidt elected to lead Giant Magellan Telescope Board of Directors
FAU Engineering receives $1.5m gift to launch the ‘Ubicquia Innovation Center for Intelligent Infrastructure’
Japanese public show major reservations to cell donation for human brain organoid research
NCCN celebrates expanding access to cancer treatment in Africa at 2025 AORTIC Meeting with new NCCN adaptations for Sub-Saharan Africa
Three health tech innovators recognized for digital solutions to transform cardiovascular care
A sequence of human rights violations precedes mass atrocities, new research shows
Genetic basis of spring-loaded spider webs
Seeing persuasion in the brain
Allen Institute announces 2025 Next Generation Leaders
Digital divide narrows but gaps remain for Australians as GenAI use surges
Advanced molecular dynamics simulations capture RNA folding with high accuracy
Chinese Neurosurgical Journal Study unveils absorbable skull device that speeds healing
Heatwave predictions months in advance with machine learning: A new study delivers improved accuracy and efficiency
2.75-million-year-old stone tools may mark a turning point in human evolution
Climate intervention may not be enough to save coffee, chocolate and wine, new study finds
Advanced disease modelling shows some gut bacteria can spread as rapidly as viruses
Depletion of Ukraine’s soils threatens long-term global food security
Hornets in town: How top predators coexist
Transgender women do not have an increased risk of heart attack and stroke
Unexpectedly high concentrations of forever chemicals found in dead sea otters
Stress hormones silence key brain genes through chromatin-bound RNAs, study reveals
Groundbreaking review reveals how gut microbiota influences sleep disorders through the brain-gut axis
Breakthrough catalyst turns carbon dioxide into essential ingredient for clean fuels
New survey reveals men would rather sit in traffic than talk about prostate health
Casual teachers left behind: New study calls for better induction and support in schools
Adapting to change is the real key to unlocking GenAI’s potential, ECU research shows
How algae help corals bounce back after bleaching
[Press-News.org] Poverty is the fourth greatest cause of U.S. deaths, analysis published in JAMA finds.Only heart disease, cancer and smoking kill more Americans








