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Mystery of U.S. mortality patterns

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From Times Wire Reports

People living along the southern Atlantic coast of the U.S., as well as those residing along the Mississippi River, die at a faster rate than the national average, while death rates are below the norm in the upper Great Plains, a new study shows.

These patterns of mortality have been consistent for 35 years, Dr. Jeralynn Sittig Cossman and colleagues from Mississippi State University found.

“Place matters, and it matters for a long period of time,” Cossman said.

“We’re trying to disentangle poverty rates, access to care, and really get to what’s going to explain these pockets.”

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Most of this variation can’t be explained by race or income, she added, so as-yet unknown environmental or population factors must be at work.

The findings, published in the American Journal of Public Health, came from analyzing county-by-county mortality data for seven five-year periods, from 1968 to 2002.

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