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10-year jump in life expectancy for rich nations, US lags

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Rich countries have gained more than 10 years in life expectancy on average since 1970, a study released by the said Wednesday, but the ranked near the bottom in the latest ranking for 2013.

Averaged across men and women, the US — at 78.8 years — was 27th in life expectancy at birth among the 34 countries in the , the intergovernmental organisation said.

Forty years ago, Americans lived a year longer than the average, but today they have fallen well below the median, it said.

At the same time, the US outstripped other nations in per capita health expenditure, spending two-and-a-half times more than the average within the , which also includes a handful of emerging economies such as and .

Life expectancy at birth measures how long someone born today would live if current mortality rates continued to apply. In reality, improvements in medicine means that age spans are likely to increase over time.

Average lifespan across all nations reached 80.5 years in 2013, an increase of more than 10 years since 1970.

A persistent gap in life expectancy between women, who live longer, and men has gradually narrowed from about seven years to five, the study found.

— at 83.4 years — along with and topped the charts for life expectancy in 2013, followed by , and , according to the annual overview of health metrics.

At the bottom of the 34-strong ranking were , and, in last place, , where life expectancy was nine years less than in or .

Several factors account for the poor and declining life expectancy in the US, the report said, starting with its weak public health sector and the millions of Americans who remain uninsured.

High income inequality, illegal drug use, along with high rates of obesity, traffic accidents and homicide also push average life spans down.

Looking at major risk factors — smoking, alcohol and obesity — the US ranked last on the obesity index, but was among healthiest nations for tobacco consumption.

, , and scored very poorly across two risk categories: smoking and drinking. Hungarians were the only people to seriously overindulge in all three.

and were the only countries among the 34 in which all three risk factors remained very low.

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