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China's Increasing Wealth Is Changing the Way People Die

China’s health trends increasingly resemble the U.S. and other advanced nations, according to a new study.

China's Increasing Wealth Is Changing the Way People Die
Pedestrians wearing face masks walk across a street as buildings stand shrouded in haze in Beijing, China. (Photographer: Giulia Marchi/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Chronic illnesses like stroke, heart problems and lung cancer became the top causes of premature death in China over the last three decades, according to a new study showing health trends that increasingly resemble the U.S. and other advanced nations.

The study, published this week in the Lancet, showed those conditions replacing lung infections and neonatal disorders as the lead killers in China. The analysis offers a bird’s eye view of the new pressures facing Asia’s largest economy. As China grapples with more complex and long-running diseases that are expensive to treat, the shift is increasingly likely to drive up its health-care costs.

About 90% of America’s $3.3 trillion in annual health-care expenditure is for people with chronic and mental health conditions, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

China's Increasing Wealth Is Changing the Way People Die

“Like many countries, China has reached a tipping point over the past three decades,’’ said Maigeng Zhou, an official at an offshoot of the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, who helped lead the study. “Going forward, the burden of chronic health problems, especially among the elderly, will far exceed infectious diseases.’’

High Blood Pressure

China’s health spending was 5% of gross domestic product in 2016, compared with 17.1% in the U.S., 11.5% in France, and 9.8% in the U.K., according to the World Health Organization.

High blood pressure, smoking, high salt intake and outdoor pollution were now big contributing factors to deaths in China, the study said.

The research showed substantial differences in health problems at the provincial level. People in urban, coastal and wealthier provinces in eastern China are healthier than those in rural and poorer areas in the west, the research showed. Meanwhile, the national diabetes rate increased more than 50% between 2000 and 2017 due to changing lifestyles, including increased consumption of red meat and decreased levels of physical activity.

China is pushing to reduce pressure on its public health system by attempting to reduce drug prices and encourage more investment in hospitals.

The suicide rate for women in China fell sharply from 21.5 deaths per 100,000 people in 1990 to 7.5 deaths in 2017 amid greater opportunities for women, the analysis showed. Suicide rates among men also dropped.

The nation has benefited from the declines in maternal and child mortality rates over nearly three decades that have accompanied economic growth, as well as its efforts to implement national programs to tackle infectious diseases, according to the study. Part of a project called the Global Burden of Disease conducted by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington, it studied data from 1990 to 2017.

In the U.S., heart diseases were the leading cause of death in 2016, followed by cancer, accidents, chronic lower respiratory diseases and stroke, according to the CDC.

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD, and liver cancer were also the leading causes of death in China.

Compared to countries with similar levels of economic development, such as Russia, China has unusually high levels of stroke, COPD, lung cancer, liver cancer, neck pain and stomach cancer, the study said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kanoko Matsuyama in Tokyo at kmatsuyama2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alyssa McDonald at amcdonald61@bloomberg.net, ;Rachel Chang at wchang98@bloomberg.net, Anjali Cordeiro

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.