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Explore health in the US with data on life expectancy, birth rates, and health risk factors for a variety of ages and races. Get the bigger picture on health insurance, uninsured rates, and more.
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Current selection: Health — health-outcomes
Each year in the US, over 100,000 people visit an emergency room for accidental carbon monoxide poisoning, with tens of thousands hospitalized.
Nearly 47% of Americans ages 18 and over got a flu shot during the 2022–2023 flu season — but uptake of CDC-recommended vaccinations for hepatitis B and shingles lags.
The federal government has resources that help people locate nearby mental health treatment facilities. Yet, over one-third of Americans live in areas that lack mental health professionals.
Mental illness rates have increased in recent decades, with the highest rates recorded for women, younger adults, and people in the Western and Midwestern United States.
Nearly one-third of bisexual and gay men and bisexual women dealt with a substance use disorder last year, as did one-quarter of lesbians.
Infant mortality fell by nearly 30% since 1999 but has risen over the last two years.
Just over four out of five HIV-positive people in the US receive medical treatment within one month of being diagnosed.
In 2021, 35,769 people were newly diagnosed with HIV — a 7% decrease from 2017, but an 18% increase over 2020.
In 2030, 73 million Americans — 21% of the population — will be 65 years or older.
Ninety-three percent of children received state-required vaccinations for school in 2022.
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