When my mother was born (1929), life expectancy was 57.1 years. 12 years ago, a Dr. told her if she didn't have chest-cracked-open heart surgery, she would be dead in a year, maybe 2. She opted to not have the surgery, didn't want to spend a year recovering.
She will be 95 in eight weeks.
My dad was born in 1928, with a then-life expectancy of 56.8. He lived 10 weeks shy of his 90th. His health habits were far from the best - fairly sedentary his entire life and went from drinking coffee in the morning to wine in the evening with very little water ever. He even had open-stomach surgery for ulcers, back in the day before they realized an antibiotic could fix them.
Not too shabby.
I've never had a single childhood disease. Occasional cold, flu, or a sinus infection, but never had mumps, measles, mono, chickenpox, covid or anything else like that. Multiple surgeries for broken bones, ligaments, etc though.
This tells me to not put a lot of stock in NCHS data charts I guess.
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Chino 1960's to 1976, Torrance, CA 1976-1983, 87-91, 94-98 / Frederick Co., MD 1983-1987/ Valencia, CA 1991-1994/ Brea, CA 1998-2002/ Dana Point, CA 2002-2019/ Knoxville, TN 2019-Current/ FL 2022-Current
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