The main reason for the increase in deaths? COVID-19, said
Robert Anderson, who oversees the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s
work on death statistics.
The agency this month quietly updated its provisional death
tally. It showed there were 3.465 million deaths last year, or about 80,000
more than 2020′s record-setting total.
Early last year, some experts were optimistic that 2021
would not be as bad as the first year of the pandemic — partly because
effective COVID-19 vaccines had finally become available.
“We were wrong, unfortunately,” said Noreen Goldman, a
Princeton University researcher.
COVID-19 deaths rose in 2021 — to more than 415,000, up from
351,000 the year before — as new coronavirus variants emerged and an
unexpectedly large numbers of Americans refused to get vaccinated or were
hesitant to wear masks, experts said.
The coronavirus is not solely to blame. Preliminary CDC data
also shows the crude death rate for cancer rose slightly, and rates continued
to increase for diabetes, chronic liver disease and stroke.
Drug overdose deaths also continued to rise. The CDC does not
yet have a tally for 2021 overdose deaths, because it can take weeks of lab
work and investigation to identify them. But provisional data through October
suggests the nation is on track to see at least 105,000 overdose deaths in 2021
— up from 93,000 the year before.
New research released Tuesday showed a particularly large
jump in overdose deaths among 14- to 18-year-olds.
Adolescent overdose death counts were fairly constant for
most of the last decade, at around 500 a year, according to the paper published
by the Journal of the American Medical Association. They almost doubled in
2020, to 954, and the researchers estimated that the total hit nearly 1,150
last year.
Joseph Friedman, a UCLA researcher who was the paper’s lead
author, called the spike “unprecedented.”
Those teen overdose deaths were only around 1% of the U.S.
total. But adolescents experienced a greater relative increase than the overall
population, even though surveys suggest drug use among teens is down.
Experts attributed the spike to fentanyl, a highly lethal
drug that has been cut into heroin for several years. More recently it’s also
been pressed into counterfeit pills resembling prescription drugs that teens
sometimes abuse.
National death trends affect life expectancy — an estimate
of the average number of years a baby born in a given year might expect to
live.
With rare exceptions, U.S. life expectancy has reliably
inched up year after year. But the CDC’s life expectancy estimate for 2020 was
about 77 years — more than a year and a half lower than what it was in 2019.
The CDC has not yet reported its calculation for 2021. But
Goldman and some other researchers have been making their own estimates,
presented in papers that have not yet been published in peer-reviewed journals.
Those researchers think U.S. life expectancy dropped another
five or six months in 2021 — putting it back to where it was 20 years ago.
A loss of more than two years of life expectancy over the
last two years “is mammoth,” Goldman said.
One study looked at death data in the U.S. and 19 other
high-income countries. The U.S. fared the worst.
“What happened in the U.S. is less about the variants than
the levels of resistance to vaccination and the public’s rejection of
practices, such as masking and mandates, to reduce viral transmission,” one of
the study’s authors, Dr. Steven Woolf of Virginia Commonwealth University, said
in a statement.
Some experts are skeptical that life expectancy will quickly
bounce back. They worry about long-term complications of COVID-19 that may hasten
the deaths of people with chronic health problems.
Preliminary — and incomplete — CDC data suggest there were
at least 805,000 U.S. deaths in about the first three months of this year.
That’s well below the same period last year, but higher than the comparable
period in 2020.
“We may end up with a ‘new normal’ that’s a little higher
than it was before,” Anderson said. -AP