How Death Has Changed in the Last 100 Years
Reduced infant mortality and disease rates have led to longer lives but not necessarily “good deaths.” In this activity, several graphs show how far we’ve come in 100 years while also prompting reflection on how the circumstances and outcomes of death can be further improved.
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How Death Has Changed in the Last 100 Years
A century ago, the average life span worldwide was less than 40 years (around 50 in the rapidly industrializing United States). Half of the world’s babies died before age 5. Now newborns are expected to live to age 71 (79 in the United States); in many nations, centenarians are the fastest-growing age group.
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Data from Arias, 2014.
How Death Has Changed in the Last 100 Years
In the early 1900s, death was usually fast and unstoppable; once the brain, the heart, or any other vital organ failed, the rest of the body quickly followed. Now death can often be postponed through medical technology: Hearts can beat for years after the brain stops functioning, respirators can replace lungs, and dialysis does the work of failing kidneys. For most of our ancestors, death occurred at home, with family nearby. Now most deaths occur in hospitals or other institutions, with the dying surrounded by medical personnel and machines.
Data from National Center for Health Statistics, 2013.
How Death Has Changed in the Last 100 Years
People of all ages once usually died of infectious diseases (tuberculosis, typhoid, smallpox), or, for many women and most infants, in childbirth. Now disease deaths before age 50 are rare, and in developed nations most newborns (99 percent) and their mothers (99.99 percent) live.
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Data from Jones, et al., 2012.
How Death Has Changed in the Last 100 Years
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REFERENCES
Arias, Elizabeth. (2014). United States life tables, 2010. National Vital Statistics Reports 63(7). Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics.
Jones, David S.; Podolsky, Scott H. & Greene, Jeremy A. (2012). The burden of disease and the changing task of medicine. The New England Journal of Medicine, 366, 2333—2338. doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1113569
National Center for Health Statistics. (2013). Health, United States, 2012: With special feature on emergency care. Hyattsville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
National Center for Health Statistics. (2011). Health, United States, 2010: With special feature on death and dying. Hyattsville, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Pew Research Center. (2015, May 12). America’s changing religious landscape: Christians decline sharply as share of population; unaffiliated and other faiths continue to grow. Religion & Public Life. Washington, DC: Pew Research Center.
U.S. Census Bureau. (1907). Statistical Abstract of the United States 1906. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Commerce.