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Leah Abrams , Tufts University
Sha Jiang, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
Diego Alburez-Gutierrez, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
Enrique Acosta, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona
Emilio Zagheni, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
U.S. life expectancy plateaued since 2010 and declined in 2014-2017 and 2020–2021. This analysis calculated trends in the number of individuals in the U.S. who lost close kin— a mother, father, at least one sibling, or at least one child—and how the number bereaved changes under counterfactual mortality conditions. We found that adverse mortality in 2010–2019 and spikes in mortality in 2020–2021 resulted in a substantial increase in the number of individuals bereaved annually, especially for individuals bereaved by sibling loss. If the U.S. had maintained its 200-2009 rates of mortality improvement, about 2.7 million fewer people would have experienced at least one close-kin loss during 2010–2019. By 2021, the excess number of individuals who had ever been bereaved since 2010 was 5.6 million. Considering single years, in 2019 alone 8.6% of all bereaved individuals—around 0.9 million people—would not have lost any close relative had the U.S. maintained its previous pace of mortality improvement. In 2021, the corresponding annual excess rose to 25%, about 3.2 million individuals. Excess bereavement is similar when applying the concurrent rates of mortality improvement of countries like Japan and Switzerland. Decomposition analyses revealed that the U.S.’s excess bereavement can be explained primarily by adverse mortality trends, rather than by differences in size or composition of the population at risk. Considering population health trends from the perspective of the number bereaved shifts the focus from individual deaths to their rippling effects on surviving family, at a population scale.
Presented in Session P5. Health, Mortality, and Ageing 1