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We all want to live a long and healthy life, but what helps accomplish this? A recent study found that the years of education a person has makes a big difference - the more years of education, the longer the average life expectancy. By years!

In the large study (involving 3110 US counties), researchers found that life expectancy differed by about 11 years when comparing college graduates versus high school graduates or only some high school.

Life expectancy in the US was highest among college graduates (84.2 years) lower among those with some college education (82.1 years), lower still among those with a high school diploma (77.3 years), and lowest among those with some high school (73.5 years). When combining everyone (all groups), average life expectancy in 2019 was 80.1 years

Also, between 2000 and 2019, life expectancy increased the most for college graduates, less for the next 2 groups, and stayed the same for those without a high school diploma. Females also had a longer life expectancy than males in all groups, with the biggest difference in the high school groups (about 5.6 to 5.8 years), and the least among college graduates (3.1 years).

From Medical Xpress: US college graduates live an average of 11 years longer than those who never finish high school, study finds

Across more than 3,000 US counties, vast geographic differences with a widening gap were registered between the least and most educated, with a longer lifespan for those with a higher level of education. That's according to the latest analysis by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington's School of Medicine that was published in The Lancet Public Health. ...continue reading "Years of Education and Life Expectancy in the US"