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Older Black people die at higher rates than their white peers. Here's why aging is a greater risk for Black Americans.

Jazmin Goodwin, Data Work By Elena Cox on

Published in Slideshow World

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Older Black people die at higher rates than their white peers. Here's why aging is a greater risk for Black Americans.

For older Black people in America, the golden years often come with a harsh reality: They are more likely to suffer from chronic illnesses, be sicker in old age, and die younger than their white counterparts. 

In 2018, Black Americans' average life expectancy was 74.7 years, four years less than the overall average of 78.7. However, a drop in life expectancy during the COVID-19 pandemic further exacerbated racial disparities among mortality rates: Black people were expected to live 70.8 years, compared with 76.4 years for white people and 77.7 years for Hispanic people, according to 2021 provisional data.  

Black Americanswere also 20% more likely to be diagnosed with high blood pressure and 1.4 times more likely to be diagnosed with diabetes than non-Hispanic white adults, according to 2025 data from the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Minority Health. They also tend to have worse outcomes and higher mortality rates for cancers, including lung and prostate cancer. Recent data from the CDC shows older Black populations die from stroke, diabetes, kidney disease, hypertension, and sepsis (a life-threatening reaction to an infection) at significantly higher rates than their white peers. 

Research has shown that Black people encounter worse health outcomes as they age due to a lifetime of unequal access to health care, healthy food, safe housing, and economic opportunities. These nonmedical factors influencing health and well-being are known as social determinants of health, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Social determinants of health often amplify with age. "We are living in bodies that have to endure multiple harms that attack us throughout the life course," Dr. Jessica Owens-Young, associate professor of health studies at American University, told Stacker. "When we finally reach the age of being a senior, all of those experiences can lead to entering seniorhood or eldership—those golden years—with a body and with experiences that have been weathered."

QMedic analyzed data from theCDC and spoke with experts to take a hard look at the reality of aging as a Black person in America.

Visit thestacker.com for similar lists and stories.


 

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