The death rate for US children has surged by 25 percent over the past decade, according to a study published last month by pediatrician Dr. Christopher Forrest and colleagues in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Even as the child mortality rate has slowly fallen in other developed countries, it has surged in the US, along with every other indicator of chronic illness.
“Staggering” and “dramatically” are not statistical terms.
They are descriptive terms used in the article to describe the statistics. They don’t change the statistics, 54 excess child deaths a day.
I could do without the editorialization then. I could use some help interpreting the numbers, but they lose me with words like “staggering”.
How would you describe 54 excess child deaths per day? Harrowing maybe? Depressing perhaps?
Or you think it’s possibly not one of this? It’s it comforting to you? Pretty weird one to be upset over and describe as editorialization.
The US population is 300 million so I would want to know whether 54 is a lot or a few. 54 excess means we expected to get N, but instead we got N+54. So my first question is: what is N? Are we over by a few percent, or by a factor of 20, or what?
See? You’re arguing over a word without bothering to read the article or understand the statistic.
The question “what is N” doesn’t make sense here. Excess child deaths doesn’t mean we expect N deaths and are okay with that…
Let me explain:
Take the actual U.S. child deaths.
Compute a counterfactual N* = how many would have died if the U.S. had the same age-specific child mortality rates as peer rich countries.
Excess = Actual − N*. It’s the avoidable difference, not an acceptable target.
That’s why the piece says ~316,000 excess child deaths (≈54 per day) from 2007–2022, those are deaths above what we’d expect if U.S. kids had peer-country risk.
And if you want scale: U.S. kids weren’t a few percent worse off. In 2014 they were ~1.6× more likely to die than peers; by 2022 it was ~2.3×—that’s 60% to 130% higher risk, not “a factor of 20,” but nowhere near “just a little bit” either. It’s staggering!
If a toy number helps: suppose peers have 25 deaths per 100k children in a year and the U.S. has ~58 per 100k. Apply those rates to the U.S. child population and you’d “expect” ~N* at the peer rate but observe far more; the gap between them is the excess. The study’s bottom line is that this gap averaged ~54 preventable child deaths every day over 16 years.
In other words, the US is a third world country.
Thanks, yes, we agree about what excess means. Rather than toy numbers I was hoping you could supply the actual numbers. It might be easiest to compare actuarial tables for different countries. Also, if the number of excess deaths has shot up suddenly in the past 5 years, that might be from COVID. We would have to look at medical, public health, and other explanations. Nowadays we also have to add vaccine hesitancy.
I live in the US and would say it’s pretty good in some ways and messed up others, like most countries. This sounds like one of the messed up parts, but I think I can say that without sensationalism.
COVID affected all other developed nations being compared. Again the N you’re seeking doesn’t matter.
If we had 1,000 additional deaths per day worldwide, it still wouldn’t be counted in the excess deaths. Excess deaths is relative to other developed nations.
Why did their excess deaths not rise similarly? What’s unique about the US? It’s not COVID, friend.
The US had some really terrible COVID policies about masking, school ventilation, etc. Other countries were often better, sometimes worse. And now we’ve got RFK Jr running the asylum.
Anyway, as you say, excess deaths are relative to other nations, so I need to know the baseline. That’s N, and yes it matters.
At the moment it seems to me that the US has worse overall health and shorter life expectancy than, say, EU countries, but not by huge margins.[1] That’s for all ages and income levels. Not good, but not something that makes me immediately want to move, and I feel more threatened by other things like accelerating global warming.
[1] https://www.vice.com/en/article/money-cant-buy-life-the-richest-americans-die-earlier-than-the-poorest-europeans/