Finding
Robert Hummer of the Carolina Center for Population Aging and Health (CCPAH) and PAA President, and Iliya Gutin find sociology is optimally positioned to lead discourse on the future of US life expectancy and the key influence of social determinants in an article in the Annual Review of Sociology.
ABSTRACT
Despite decades of progress, the future of life expectancy in the United States is uncertain due to widening socioeconomic disparities in mortality, continued disparities in mortality across racial/ethnic groups, and an increase in extrinsic causes of death. These trends prompt us to scrutinize life expectancy in a high-income but enormously unequal society like the United States, where social factors determine who is most able to maximize their biological lifespan. After reviewing evidence for biodemographic perspectives on life expectancy, the uneven diffusion of health-enhancing innovations throughout the population, and the changing nature of threats to population health, we argue that sociology is optimally positioned to lead discourse on the future of life expectancy. Given recent trends, sociologists should emphasize the importance of the social determinants of life expectancy, redirecting research focus away from extending extreme longevity and toward research on social inequality with the goal of improving population health for all.
Gutin, Iliya & Hummer, Robert A. (Online ahead of print). Social Inequality and the Future of US Life Expectancy. Annual Review of Sociology. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-soc-072320-100249