America’s shocking mortality rate
David Wallace-Wells
The New York Times
America is a deadly place, says David Wallace-Wells. Just how deadly is clear from a recent largescale study by mortality researchers. It showed that, since the turn of the millennium, roughly half-a-million more people in America have died each year than would have died, on average, in equivalent economies. It’s a growing gap that reflects a grim US “exceptionalism” in all sorts of areas. In 2020, for instance, the EU reported 5,800 overdose deaths in a population of about 440 million; the US, with a smaller population of 330 million, reported an astonishing 68,000. In 2021, there were 26,000 murders in the US, compared with 300 in Italy; and more than 5,000 fatal workplace accidents, compared with 123 in England.…