VOLUME II- SECTION 5
Life Tables
VITAL STATISTICS OF THE UNITED STATES, 1970
VOLUME II -SECTION 5
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF
HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
Health Resources Administration
National Center for Health Statistics
NATIONAL CENTER FOR HEALTH STATISTICS
EDWARD B. PERRIN, Ph. D., Acting Director
PHILIP S. LAWRENCE, SC.D., Deputy Director
GAIL F. FISHER, Assistant Director for Health Statistics Development
WALT R. SIMMONS, M.A., Assistant Director for Research and Scientific Development
JOHN J. HANLON, M.D., Medical Advisor
JAMES E. KELLY, D.D.S., Dental Advisor
EDWARD M. MINTY, Executive Officer
ALICE HAYWOOD, Information Officer
DIVISION OF VITAL STATISTICS
ROBERT A. ISRAEL, M.S., Director
JOHN E. PATTERSON, Assistant DirectcJrfor Demographic Affairs
ROBERT J. ARMSTRONG, M.S., chief Mortality Statistics Branch
ROBERT L. HEUSER, M.A., Chiej Natality Statistics Branch
LOREN E. CHANCELLOR, chief Registration ~ethods Brunch
ALICE M. HETZEL, Chief Marriage and Divbrce Statistics Branch
ARNE B. NELSON, M.A., Chief Vital Records Survey Branch
MICHAEL J. ZUGZDA, Chie$ Statistical Resources Section
Guide to tables in Section 5
I I I
TABLE: 5
PAGE: 5
Years:1900-1970----------------------------
1970 only----------------------------
-1 -2 -3 -4 -5
-7 -10 -11 -12 -14
51
1 2 3
Specified years and 1970------------- 42
Type of entry:Proportion of dying (nqX)------------ 1
Number surviving (IX)---------------- 1 2 4
Number dying (nix)------------------- 1
Stationary population (nLxand Tx)--- 1
Average remaining lifetime (:X )----- 1 3 4
Estimated average length oflife (8X)- 5
Characteristics:
Age by:Single years------------------------ 2 3
5-year intervals--------------------- 1 4
Sex-color specific-------------------- 1 2 3 4 53
Sex specific-------------------------- 1 2 3 5
Color specific------------------------ 1 2 3 53
Total population---------------------- 1 2 3 5..“’EntireUnited States for 1929-70; death-registration States for
1900-1928.2Entire United States for specified years from 1929 to 1970; death-
registration States for specified years from 1900 to 1921.zNew Jersey did not require the reporting of color or race in 1962
and 1963.
Section5. L#e TabZes
Page
The life table program ------------------------------------------------ 5-3
Life table valuesfor 1970 ---------------------------------------------- 5-3
Trends and comparisons ---------------------------------------------- 5-4
Technical appendix --------------------------------------------------- 5-5
Explanation of the columns of the lifetables ----------------------------- 5-6
Text table
5-A. Selected life table values, byage, color, and sex: United States, 1970- 5-4
5-B. Selected life table values, bycolor and sex: Death-registration areas,1970,1969,1960, 1950, 1900-1902------------------------------- 5-4
Table
5-1. Abridged life tables by color and sex: UnitedState, 1970------------- 5-7
5-2.. Number of survivors at single years ofage, out of 100,000 born alive,by color and sex: United States, 1970 ------------------------------ 5-10
5-3. Expectation of life at single years of age, bycolor and sex: UnitedStates, 1970 --------------------------------------------------- 5-11
5-4. Life table values by color and sex: Death-registration States, 1900-1902 to 1919-21, and United States, 1929-31 to1970---------------- 5-12
5-5. Estimated average length of life in years, by color andsex: Death-registration States, 1900-1928, and United States, 1929-70-------’--- 5-14
5-1
SECTION 5.
The mortality rates for a specific period may be sum-marized by the life table method to obtain measures of com-parative longevity. There are two types of life tables—thegeneration or cohort life table and the current life table. Thegeneration life table provides a “longitudinal” perspectivein that it follows the mortality experience of a particularcohort, all persons born in the year 1900 for example, fromthe moment of birth through consecutive ages in successivecalendar years. Based on age-specific death rates observedduring consecutive calendar years, the generation life tablereflects the mortality experience of a cohort from birth untilno lives remain in the group.
The better known current life table may, by contrast,be characterized as “cross-s ectional.” Unlike the generationlife table, the current life table does not represent the mor-tality experience of an actual cohort. Rather, the currentlife table considers a hypothetical cohort and assumes thatit is subject to the age-specific mortality rates observedfor an actual population during a particular period. Thus,for example, a current life table for 1970 assumes a hypo-thetical cohort subject throughout its lifetime to the age-specific mortality rates prevailing for the actual populationin 1970. The current life table may thus be characterized asrendering a “snapshot” of current mortality experience. Inthis section, the term “life table” refers to the current lifetable only and not to the generation life table.
The life table program
There are three series of life tables prepared in theNational Center for Health Statistics— complete, provi-sional abridged, and final abridged life tables. The completelife tables for the U.S. population contain life table valuesfor single years of age and are based on decennial censusdata and deaths for a 3-year period about the census yearand have been prepared since 1900. The provisional abridgedlife tables contain values by age groups and are based on a10-percent sample of deaths. The final abridged life tables(referred to in this section as “abridged life tables”) alsocontain values by age groups but are basecl’ on a completecount of all reported deaths.
In response to a growing number of requests for po.st-censal life table values, a series of abridged life tables wasinitiated in 1945. Available annually since that year, theabridged life tables are based on deaths ‘occurring duringthe calendar year and on midyear postcensal populationestimates provided by the U.S. Bureau of the Census. Refine-ments in both the techniques for estimating population andthe methods for constructing abridged life tables permit thepreparation of abridged life tables which provides reasonablyaccurate data on current trends in expectation of life andsurvivorship. Abridged life tables for 1945 to 1952 were
constructed by the Greville method; 1 since 1953, a modified2 The 1945 abridged life tablesmethod has been emplo’yed.
were prepared for white and all other males and females.Since 1946, abridged life tables for the total population havealso been available, and since 1957, abridged life tableshave been calculated for total males and total females, re-gardless of color. Starting with 1959, additional abridgedlife tables have been published for the total white and “allother” population, regardless of sex.
Numerous requests, have been received annually forcurrent life table statistics that are more detailed than thoseavailable in the abridged life tables. Therefore tables showingIX and $X values by single years of age interpolated from th,?abridged life tables have been published since 1960.
The demand for information regarding up-to-date lifetable values has been responsible for the introduction of athird series, provisional abridged life tables. Starting with1958, provisional abridged life tables have been published,for the total population only, in the “Annual Summary forthe United States, ” Monthly Vitul Statistics Repovt. Valuesin these life tables are based on population estimates pro-vided by the Bureau of the Census and on the estimatednumber of deaths derived from the “Current Mortality Sam-ple” (CMS). The CMS consists of one-tenth of the death cer-tificates filed in the vital statistics registration offices (50States and the cities of Washington, D.C., Baltimore, NewOrleans, and New York). The sample is taken by selectingone certificate out of every 10 death certificates receivedbetween two dates a month apart.’
Life table values for 1970
The data used to prepare the abridged U.S. life tablesfor 1970 are the final mortality statistics and the midyearestimates of the population by age, color, and sex preparedby the U.S. Bureau of the Census.” Sample life table statis-tics for 1970 are shown in table 5-A. The text will refer tovalues for the total U.S. population; however, the same typeof statistics may be applied to each color-sex group.
I ~ation~ office of Vital Statistics: Method of constructing the abridged
life tables for the United States, 1949, by T. N. E. Greville. Vital Statistics-
Special Reports, Vol. 33, No. 15. Public Health Service. wash~ngton, D. C.,1,953.
2Nation~ Center for Health Statistics: Comparison of two methods Of
constructing abridged life tables by reference to a ‘{standard” table, by M. G.
Sirken. Vital attd Health Statistics. PHS Pub. No. 1000-Series 2-No. 4. Public
Health Service. Washington. U.S. Government Printing Office,’1 966.
3u.s. Bureau of the Census: United States Summary, Final Report
PC(l)-B1. Censtli of Popt[latiorr, 1970, General Popttlation Characteristics.
Washington. U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972.
5-3
5-4 SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES
Exfiectation of life. —The” most frequently used life tablestatistic is the expectation of life (8X) , i.e., the average re-maining lifetime in years for persons who have attained agiven age (x) . Expectation of lie at specified ages in 1970is shown for the total population and by color and sex intable 5-1. In addition, expectations of life by single yearsof age, by color and sex, are shown in table 5-3.
Table5-A. Selectedlife table~alues,by age, color,and sex:United States,1970
Life tablevalue Totaland age
I
Expectationof life:At birth----------- 70.9At age 1----------- 71.3At age 21---------- 52.2At age 65-----------15.2
Percentsunivingfrom birth:To age 1---------- 98.0To age 21--------- 96.6To age 65--------- -71.9
Median age at death- ] 74.9
White I All other
Male
68.068.449.413.1
98.096.366.2
?l.5
75.6 61.375.8 62.556.4 43.917.1 13.3
J-98.4 96.597.5 94.0%1.5 49.9
79.4 64.9
~emale
69.470.451.216.4
97.295.866.3
72.9
Life expectancy at birth(~.)is 70.9 years, which re-presents the average number o? years that the members ofthe life table cohort may expect to live at the time of birth.Text table 5-A shows the higher life expectancy of femalesas compared with males within each color group, and ofwhites as compared with those in the all other category. Atage 1, life expectancy is 71.3 years, which is higher than atbirth. This is a result of surviving the first year, when themortality rate is very high. Remaining years of expectedlifetime are also shown in table 5-A forages 21 and 65 years.
Suvvivovs to specified ages. —Another way of assessing
longevity of the life table cohort is by determining the pro-portion of it that lives to specified ages. The IX columnprovides the data for computing the proportion. For instance,71,858 out of the original 100,000 (or 71.9 percent) werealive at exact age 65 (table 5-2). Survivorship to other ages,by color and sex, is shown as percentage in table 5-A.
Medtin le~h of life. — Instead of determining the pro-portion alive at a specified age, one can compute the age atwhich a specified proportion of the cohort is still alive. Forexample, one can determine the age at which exactly halfthe cohort (50,000 persons) still remain alive, and half havedied. This value, known as the median age at death, is shownat the bottom of table 5-A, by color and sex. For example,the median age for white males is 7.9 years less than forwhite females.
Trends and comparisons
The geographic areas covered in life tables prior to1929-31 were limited to the death-registration areas. Lifetables for 1919-21 were constructed using mortality datafrom the 1920 death-registration States— 34 States and theDistrict of Columbia—and for 1900-1902 and 1909-11 fromthe 1900 death-registration States—10 States and the Dis-trict of Columbia. The tables for 1929-31 through 1958 coverthe conterminous United States. Decennial life table valuesfor the 3-year period 1959-61 are derived from data whichinclude both Alaska and Hawaii for each year (table 5-4).Data for each year shown in table 5-5 include Alaska for1959 and both Alaska and Hawaii beginning with 1960. I-low-
ever, it is not believed that the inclusion of these two Statesmaterially affects life table values.
Table5-B. Selectedlife tablevalues, bycolor and sex:Death-registrationareas,1970, 1969,1960, 1950, 190C-1902
Life tablevalueand year
Life expectancy(~w)-,.at birth:1970---------------1969---------------1960---------------195c---------------190c---------------
At age 20:197C!---------------190G1902----------
Percentreachingage65:1970---------------190c-1902----------
rotal
70.970.469.768.247.3
53.1---
71.9---
mite
Male
68.067.867.466.546.6
50.342.2
66.239.2
~emale
75.675.174.172.248.7
57.443.8
81.543.8
All other
!ale
61.360.561.159.132.5
44.735.1
49.919.0
~emale
69.468.466.362.933.5
52.236.9
66.322.0
Trends in life table values are shown in tables 5-4 and
5-5. Table 5-4 shows the expectation of life, and the numberof cohort survivors at specified ages around census yearssince 1900, and for 1969 and 1970. Life expectancy amongwhite males exactly 20 years old, for instance, has increasedfrom 42.2 years in 1900-1902 to 50.3 years in 1970 (texttable 5-B). Where 39.2 percent of white males survivedto age 65 in 1900-1902, now 66.2 percent survive to this age.
There has been an increasing interest in data on averagelength of life (~o)for single calendar years prior to the ini-tiation of the annual abridged life table series in 1945. Theestimated. figures in table 5-5 were computed to meet these
SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES 5-5
needs.4 For example, life expectancy has increased by 3.4years among white females since .1950, or an average in-crease of 0.17 year of Iife per calendar year. Values forother years, by color and sex, are shown in table 5-B.
Technical appendix
NewJwsey data, 1962-64.--The life tables for 1962 and1963 for the six population groups involving color do notinclude data from the State of New Jersey. This Stateomitted the item on color or ,race from its certificates of
4For ~~timating ~rocedure, see National office of vital statistics,
“Estimated AverageLength of Life in the Death-Registrationstates,” by T.N. E. Grevilleand G. A. Carlson, VitalStatistics-SpecialReports, vol. 33,No. 9. PublicHeahh Service,Washington,D.C., 1951.
live birth, death, and fetal death in use at the beginningof 1962. The item was restored during the latter part of1962. However, the certificate revision without this itemwas used for most of 1962 as well as for 1963. For com-puting vital rates, populations by age, color, and sex ex-cIuding New Jersey were estimated to obtain comparabledenominators. Approximately 7 percent of the New Jerseydeath recoqds for 1964 did not contain the race designation;when the records were being electronically processed, the“race not stated” deaths were allocated to white or Negro.
Standavd tuble. --U.S. life tables for the decennial period1959-61 are used as the standard table in constructing the1970 abridged life tables.
Nonresidents, 1970.— Beginning in 1970, the deaths ofnonresidents of che United States have been excluded from “the life table statistics.
5-6 SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES
Explanation of the Columns of the Life Table
Column l—Age intevvaz (x to x+ n). —The age intervalshown in column 1 is the interval between the two exact
ages indicated. For instance, “20-25” means the S-yearinterval between the 20th birthday and the 25th.
Column 2-Proportion dying (nqx) .—This column showsthe proportion of the cohort who are alive at the beginningof an indicated age interval and who will die before reachingthe end of that age interval. For example, for males in theage interval 20-25, the proportion dying is 0.0112—out ofevery 1,000 males alive and exactly 20 years old at the be-ginning of the period 11 will die before reaching their 25thbirthday. In other words, the “9X values represent ~oba-bi,lities that persons who are alive at the beginning of aspecific age interval will die before reaching the beginningof the next age interval. The “proportion dying” columnforms the basis of the life table; the life table is so con-structed that all other columns are derived from it.
Column 3—Numbk surviving .—This column showsthe number of persons, starting with a cohort of 100,000live births, who survive to the exact age marking the be-ginning of each age interval. The IX values are computedfrom the .9X values, which are successively applied to theremainder of the original 100,000 persons still alive at thebeginntig of each age interval. Thus out of 100,000 malebabies born alive, 97,745 will complete the first year oflife and enter the second; 97,298 will begin the sixth year;96,128 will reach age 20; and 13,256 will live to age 85.
Column 4—Numbw dying (ndx) .—This column showsthe number dying in each successive age interval out of100,000 live births. Out of 100,000 males born alive, 2,255die in the first year of life, 364 in the succeeding 4 years,1,079 in the 5-year period between exact ages 20 and 25,and 13,256 die after reaching age 85. Each figure in column4 is the difference between two successive figures in column3.
Columns 5 and 6—Statiomvy popuhtion (nLx and~).—
Suppose that a group of 100,000 individuals like that as-sumed in columns 3 and 4 is born every year and that theproportions dying in each such group in each age intervalthroughout the lives of the members are exactly thoseshown in column 2. If there were no migration and if thebirths were evenly distributed over the calendar year,the survivors of these births would make up what iscalled a stationery population— stationar y because insuch a population the number of persons living in anygiven age group would never change. When an individualleft the group, either by death or by growing older andentering the next higher age group, his place would im-mediately be taken by someone entering from the nextlower age group. Thus a census taken at any time insuch a stationary community would always show the sametotal population and the same numerical distribution ofthat population among the various age groups. In such astationary population supported by 100,OOO annual births,column 3 shows the number of persons who, each year,
.
reach the birthday which marks the beginning of the age in-terval indicated in column 1, and column 4 shows thenumber of persons who die each year in the indicated ageinterval.
Column 5 shows the number of persons in the stationarypopulation in the indicated age interval. For example, the ,figure given for males in the age interval 20-25 is 477,977.This means that in a stationary population of males sup-ported by 100,000 annual births and with proportions dyingin each age group always in accordance with column 2, acensus taken on any date would show 477,977 persons betweenexact ages 20 and 25.
Column 6 shows the total number of persons in thestationary population (column 5) in the indicated age intervaland all subsequent age intervals. For example, in the sta-tionary population of males referred to in the last illustra-tion, column 6 shows that there would be at any given mo-ment a total of 4,769,722 persons who have passed their20th birthday. The population at all ages O and above (inother words, the total population of the stationary commu-nity) would be 6,711,932.
Column 7—Avwageremaining lifetime (~x) .—The av-erage remaining lifetime (also called expectation of life) atany given age is the average number of years remaining tobe lived by those surviving to that age on the basis of a givenset of age-specific rates of dying. In order to arrive atthis value, it is first necessary to observe that the figuresin column 5 of the life table can also be interpreted in termsof a single life table cohort without introducing the conceptof the stationary population. From this point of view, eachfigure in column s represents the total time (in years) livedbetween two indicated birthdays by all those reaching theearlier birthday among the survivors of a cohort of 100,000live births. Thus the figure 477,977 for males in the age in-terval 20-25 is the total number of years lived between the20th and 25th birthdays by the 96,128 (column 3) who reachedthe 20th birthday out of 100,000 males born alive. The cor-responding figure (4,769,722) in column 6 is the total numberof years lived after attaining age 20 by the 96,128 reachingthat age. This number of years divided by the number ofpersons (4,769,722 divid&d by 96,128) gives 49.6 years as theaverage remaining lifetime of males at age 20.
Care must be exerci~ed in drawing conclusions from thefigures in column 7. Thus in observing that the average re-maining lifetime of white persons is greater than for thosein the all other category, one should not conclude that theoldest ages reached by white persons necessarily exceedthose attained by the most long-lived of the all other group.The difference in the average length of life results from thefact that a greater proportion of all other persons die beforereaching old age. For example, the number surviving to age65 out of 100,000 born alive is far greater among white per.sons than among all other persons; yet the average length oflife remaining at age 65 is nearly the same for both groups.
SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES
Table 5-1. Abridged Life Tables by Color and Sex: United States, 1970
AGE lNTERVA~
PERIOD OF LIFE BETWEEN TWO EXACT AGES
STATED IN YEARS
(11
xto x+n
TOTAL
oil-—--____—.--________--___—----------I-5 —--.—---______--——___ -_-_-----—-_~-lo ----_—_— ---------------------------LO-15 ------------------------------------
15-20 -—---_ ——--_—_--— ---------------z,) -25---------______ ----__--— ----------z5-30----------_— ----------------------30-35 -----— —---—-—----—-— ----------
35-40 -—-—---—-----_ -___--— ----------40-45 -----— -----------------------------45-50 -------—_____-_ ---___ ——----------50-55 -----———--__-—— ----------------
55-60 ------------------------------------60-65 -------—_____------_ —-------------bs., o -—-----—----—-----—----------—--7 o-75 --------------___ —___________________
75-80 ------------------------------------80-85 ---------------------— --------------85 AND over-----—--—--—— _____________
HAL E
0-1 —-—----—---—-—--—--— ----------1-5 —-—----— ----------------------------5-lo --—------________ --— ---------------10-15 ---------------------_ --—----------
15-20 -------—-____--__ —--------------20-*5 ---------— ------------------------25-30 ---------------------— --------------30-35 ----------------_____ ---__-— ________
35-40 -------—------—-------— ----------40-45 ---_ --------_______ -—-------------
45-5 D-------------------------------------50-55 -----------—-----------------------
5~-60-------—__ ----------_--— ----------60-65 --___ —_-----_-—_— --------------65-70 ---________________ — --------------70-75 -————------———--__—_ -—________
7~-80-—__-------_______-—--------------80-85 -------------------------------------85 ANCI OVER--—-—------—— --------------
FEMALE
o-1---------------------------------------1-5---—--—--------------—--------------5-lo------—----— ----------------------LO-15 -------— ----------------------------
15-zo-—----—_-----_____ -----_---: ----20-25 -------—-----—-_ ——--— ------------z5-ao ------------------------------------30-35 --------—----------—--—— --------
35-40 --------—— ------------------------40-45 -—----—__-____---------— __________45-50 ---------—--------— ---------------50-55 -----------—------——--— ----------
55-6 o-------—------------—--—----------60-65 -------------------------—----------65 -TO -—------------—------------—------70-T5---------_-----------_—-------------
75-80 ---------------------— --------------80-85 --------------—---— ----------------85 AND OVER-—-----—---—— -------------
[2)
“q,
0.0202.0034.0021.0020
.0055
.00T4
.0072
.0086
.0123
.01 8T
.0288
.0436
.0660
.0956
.1386
.1976
.2885
.40351.0000
0.0225..003T.0025.0026
.0079
.0112
.0101
.0114
.0156
.0240
.0372
.0574
.0890
.1306
.1872
.25T3
.3565
.46881.0000
0.0176.0030.0017.0015
.0031
.0038
.0044
.0059
.0091
.0137
.0209
.0306
.0444
.0639
.0974
.1506
.2382
.35961.0000
OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE
NUMBER LIVING,T BEGINNING OF
AGE INTERVAL
(3)
lx
100,0009T,98497,65397,448
97.2509b, T1596,00295,312
94,49193,33091,50508,945
85,06979,4587L,85861,898
49.66435,33421,077
Ig:gg
97,38197,139
96,89096,12895.04994,090
93,01391,56289,36686,042
8L,103T3,88b64,23352,210
38,77T24,95413,256
100,00098,23697,94097,773
97,62997,32896,96296,538
95,97095409393,79391,829
89,02385,06979.635T1.8T5
61,04746,50329,782
NUMBER DYINGDURING AGE
INTERVAL
(4)
d.X
2,:;:
205198
535713690821
1,1611,7452,6403,8T6
5,6117,6009,960
12,234
14,33014,25T21,077
2,255364242249
7621,079
9591,077
1,451‘2,1963,3244,939
7,2L79,653
12,02313,433
13,82311,69813,256
1,764296L67144
301366424568
8771,3001,9642,806
3,9545,4347,760
10,828
L4,54416, T2129, T82
STATIONARY POPULATION
IN THE AGEINTERVAL
[51
L“X
98,189391,144487,712406,793
485,022481,825478,310474,602
469, T45462,599451,006435,607
412,091379,204335,334279,780
213,104140,305122,292
97,968390,113486,259485,149
482,721477,977472,842467,867
461,681452,727439,154418,004
388,408346,300291,854227,840
159,24394,39470,831
98,421392,227489,242488,524
407,440485,756483,797481,349
477,800472,430464,375452,518
435,029412,546379,846333,666
270,249190,550181,176
IN THIS ANDALL SUBSEQUENTAGE INTERVALS
[61
Tx
7,085,4726,987,2836,596,1396,108,42T
5,621,6345,136,6124,654,7074,176,477
3,701,8753,232,1302,769,5312,317, T25
1,802,1181,470,027L,090,823
755,409
4i5.70~262,59T122,292
6,711,9326,613,9646,223,8515,737,592
5,252,4434,769,7224,291,7453,818,903
3,351,0362,889,3552,436,6281,997,474
1,578,8701,190,462
844, 162552,308
324,468&65,225
70,831
7,477,7417,379,3206,907,0936,497,851
6,009,3275,521,8875,036,1314,552,334
4,070,98$3,593,1853,120,7552,656,380
2,203,8621,768,0331,355,487
975,641
641,9753T1, T26181, 176
5.7
AVERAGE REMAIN-ING LIFETIME
AvE8AGE NUMBERIF YEARS OF LIFE
REMAINING ATBEGINNING OFAGE INTERVAL
[7]
70.971.367.562.7
57.853.140.543.8
39.234.630.226.1
22.118.515.212.2
9.67.45.8
67.167.763.959.1
54.249.645.240.6
36.031.627.323.2
19.516.113.110.6
8.46.65.3
14.875.171.366.5
61.656.751.947.2
42.437.833.328.9
24.820.817.013.6
10.58.06.1
5-8 SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES
Table 5-1. Abridged Life Tables by Color and Sex: United States, 1970-Con.
AGE INTERVAL
PER1OD OF LIFE BET!4EEN TUO EXACT AGES
STATED IN YEARS
[1)
xtox+n
UHITE
~.~.--—________---.-——_--—__________1-5---—-----------—--—-— -------------5-lo--------— ----------------------------10-15 -------——------— ------------------
15-20 -----—----------———---—-—-——20-25 ------------______ -_-_ -_ —----------25-30 ----------------------------------
30-35 -------—--------------------------—
35-40 -—----— ----------------------------40-45 ----------------------------------45-50 ---------—-----_——----—_ --_-— _____so-55 --- —________-_-—-_--—___ --——--
55-b e-----____ ---------_ --—-------------60-65 -—------ —----— -- ——-—--——&3-70 -----________ -_-----____-_-------—
T O-75 -—----------------— ----------—--—
75-8 0-------—-----—-——----—--——-—80-85 ---------------—----—-----------—85 AND OVER---------------—---— --------
WHITE, MALE
o-l---—------——--——————--—-—--1-5-----------—----------—--------------5-10 ------—----—-—---—-———-——————10-15 -----——-—--—------——--——--
15-20 -—----—--------—--—-----—-------.20-25 —----——-—-—---—_--—-— _________2~-30_____________________________30-35 -----————--------—---——-—---
35-4 D-----__ ——_-----__----——-----— -----40-45 ---------—-——-—--—-———--——45-50 ----- —--------—--- ——-----——-—50-55 ---------------------— ______
55-6 O---------—---—-__ ——---------60-65 -------------—----——----—----——65-70 -------------------------------------70-T5 -------—-----—---——------———--
75-Be -----_ -_--—_ —-—--—_ -—_—-——80-85 -------—-----— ---------------------85 AND OVER---------—----—----——--—--
WHITE, FEMALE
. 0-l-----------------—----—--------------1-5-------------— ------------------------5-10 --------------------------------------10-15 -------------------------------------
15 -20--------------------- —-----— ------ZO-25------------------------------------
2 5-30 --------------------------—--------30-35 -----_ -------------_-— -------------
35-40 -----------------—--—------—------40-+5 -----------------—--—-------—----45-50 -------------------------------------SD-55 --------------—-----------——------
55-60 -----—-------—-----—--—-----—---6D-b5---------—----—------------------—65-7 D-----_____ ------_ ---____ -----—----—
70-7> --------------—-----—-----———
75-80 -----__—--_--——----—----_--——00-85 -----—----——--—---—-—— --------85 AND OVER-—-----—-----—-—— --------
PROPORTIONDYING
PROPORTION OF~ERSONS ALIVE AT3EG1NN1NG OF &GE
INTERVAL DYINGlURING INTERVAL
(21
0.0179.0030.0020.0019
.0051
.0065
. D060
.0102
.0161
.0259
.0402
.0623
.D91T
.1343
. 193T
. 28T9
.40761.0000
D. D201.0033.0024.0024
.0D73
. DD99
.0084
.0092
.0129
.0208
.0337
.0536
.0852
.1272
.1842
.2549
.3571
.47491.0000
D. D155.0026.0016.0014
.0029
.D033
. DD3T
.0048
.0075
.0115
.0185
.0276
.D408
.0595
.0921
.1459
.2371
.36281.0000
OF lD0,000 BORN ALIVE
NUMBER LIVING$T BEGINNING OF
AGE lNTERVAL
[31
1=
Ioo, ooc9S,21297,91e97, T23
97,53597,03396,40295,822
95,15C94, L8C92.66590,264
86,63281,23873,78763.876
51,50236,67521,726
lD0,0009T, 99097. h6397.431
9T. 19596,48295,52694, T21
93.04T92,63290.70587. 6+7
82.952T5,08666,23154,029
40.25825,88313,591
100,00090,44798, L8798,030
91.89397,6109T,29096,935
9b,4b595,74094,63592,882
90,31786.6368L, 48573,981
63, L8548.20430,715
NUMBER DYINGDURING AGE
INTERVAL
[4)
d.x
1,738294L95188
502631580672
9T01,5L52,4013,632
5,3947,4519,911
12.3T4
14,82714,94921,726
2,010327232236
713956805874
1,2151.9273,0584,695
T,0669,655
1,2,20223,771
14,37512,29213.591
1,553260157137
283320355470
7251.L051.7532,565
3,68L5.1517,504
lD, T96
14,98LLT,48930,715
STATIONARY POPULA71ON
IIN THIS AND
IN THE AGE ALL SUBSEQUENTINTERVAL AGE 1N7ERvALS
15) I(61
L“. I T.
98,373392,1534a9,066488, L92
4a6,5L0483,602480,569+T7,509
473.497467,407457,703M2,794
420,4643a8.535345,189289,453
221,136145.242123.1b3
98, L67391,195407,697486. 6+0
4a4,35248 D,D3L4T5 ,59747 L,5L1
466,415458,729W6.495427,229
398,063356,3513D1,482236,20b
165,30297,47310,304
98,59135’3,166490, SOT489,825
438,7964L7T,268485,596433,567
4a D,63a4T6 ,138469,091458,359
442,984421,146309,014344,404
279, S’70197, L42103,616
7,170,6457,072,2726,680,1156,191,05?
5,702,8615,2 L6,3424,732,7+14,252,172
3,774,66?3,3 D1, L6t2,833,75S2,375, 9Tt
1,933, 1821,512,7L$1, L24, L8?
778,994
4a9,541260,405L23, L63
6,799,3196,7 D1,1526,309,9575.822.26o
5,335.62C4,851,2684,371.2313,895.64C
3,424,1292,95 T,714?.,498,9852,052,490
L,633,2611,227,198
870,047569,365
333,159167,857
70,384
7,560,6267,462,0357,068,8696,5 T8,362
6.038,5375,599,7415,1 L2,4734,626,877
4,143,3103,662,6723,186,5342.7 L7.443
2,259,0841,8L6, 1001,394,9541,005,140
660,73638 D,758183,616
AVERAGE REHAIN-lNG LIFETIME
AVERAGE NUMBEROF YEARS OF LIFE
REMAINING A7BEGINNING OFAGE INTERVAL
(7)
71.772.063.263.4
58.553. s49.144. +
39’133.130.626.3
22.318.615.212,2
9.57.35.7
60.068.464.659.8
54.950.345a41.1
36.531.92T.623.4
19.616.213.110,5
8.3b. 55.2
75,675.872. D67.1
62.257,452.547.7
43. D38.333.729.3
25.021.017.113.6
10.57.96.0
SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES
Table 5-1. Abridged Life Tables by Color and Sex; United States, 1970–Con.
59
AGE INTERVAL
PER1OD OF LIFE BET!4EEN THO EXACT AGE5.
STATED IN YEARS
(1)
ALL OTHER
0-1---------------------——--------------l-5 —------________ --------___ —------
5-lo--------—---— ----------------------10-15 --------—-----------— --------------
15-20 -—------------—------------—------Lo-25 -----_____ —___-—--— --------------25-30 -----__________ ---__ ----— ---------30-35 -----------------------------------
35-40 -------—-------------—-— ----------
40-45 -------------------------------------+5-50 ------------______ —----— ----------50-55 -----------— ___________
55-60 -----— ------------------------------60-65 --------— -—-—--- ——--— ----------65-,0 --—------- —-—--— ---------------70-75 --—---—----——--__--— ----------
75-so ---—--------_--— -----------------80-85 --—----—---—-———---—---—--85 AND OVER---—-----------—--------—---
ALL OTHER, MALE
o-i----------—--—.-----—--—----------1-5 ——---—-—----—---——-—— --------5-10 ----------------------------—--------10-15 ---------——---____—--— ----------
15-20 —---___—____--—--—— ----------20-25-------_------_____--— ______________25-do-----___—__-_-—--— --------------30-35-----------------—-_—_____________
35-40 -------------------------------------40-45 -—-----—-—--------—-—— --------45-5 o---——__-___—-—--— -------------50-55 ----= __________-— ------------------
55-60 --—-------—------—-------2—--6~-6~----—______ ———--— ----------65-70 -----— -—---------——--— ----------70-T5--------------------------------—---
75-80 -------—------____--— -------------80-85 ---------——-—-—--—-— --------85 AND OVER---------------— --------------
ALL OTHER, FEMALE
o-1 ——---_-----_--_ ---—----— ----------l-5 —------_ -______--___ -_-_ -—----------
5-10 --—--------------—--------—--------10-15 ------------------------------------
15-20 -------L -----------------------------20-25 -----—___ -__------_ -—-— ----------25-30 --—________-----—_-_------—---
30-35 -----—-—--------——--— ----------
35-40 -------—-----—--_-—--— ----------40-45 ----------------------—---—--------45-50 -----—______—----—--— ----------s~-s.j -----------------—-_ -—------------
55-60 -——--—-—-———----------------60-65 -------—--------—--—--—-—-------b5-70-------__--_____---------—----------70-75 -—--——---------——--— -----------
75-80 -----—--------------—-— ----------80-85 --------—--------L ---------------85 AND O'ER------------_ -___--——---—--
PROPORTIONDYING
PROPORTION OFERSONS ALIVE ATEGINNING OF AGEINTERVAL DYINGURING lNTERVAL
(2)
nq,
0.0312.0054.0027.0027
.0077
.0133
.0155
.0194
.0269
. 03LT6
.0533
.0734
.0997
.1326
.1767
.2386
.2962
.34801.0000
0.0346.0058.0031.0034
.0112
.0206
.0226
.0276
.0356
.0501
.0676
.0926
.12+2
.1629
.2130
.2811
.3490
.39321.0000
0.0277.0049.0023.0019
.0042
.0069
.0092
.0124
.0196
.0289
.040T
.0562
.0774
J
.1053
.1454
.2021
.2528
.31251.0000
OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE
NUMBER LIVING4T BEGINNING OF
AGE INTERVAL
(3)
lx
100, OOI96,08:96,36!96,10,
95, 84!95,11;93, 84!92,39!
90,60:88,16184,76;80,24(
74, 35;66,93!58,06(47,801
36,39725,61<16,70?
100, OOC96,54495,98695,68E
95,36494,30092,35[90,27c
8T, T7084,65280,+1574,979
68,03659,58749,88339,259
28,22318,37311,148
100,00097.23096,75196,528
96,34295,93495,27394,394
93,22091,39180,74685,134
80,35274,13166,324
.56,680
45,22733,79323,231
NUMBER DYINGDURING AGE
INTERVAL
[41
d“X
3,11.51126:25(
7311,26;1,4511,79,
2,43;3,4024,5225,83[
7,41?8,8T5
10,25S11,4o4
10,7810,913
16,703
3,456558298324
1,0641.9422,0882,492
3,1264,2375,4366,943
8,4499,704
10,62411,036
9,8307.225
11,148
2,T70479223186
408661879
1,174
1,8292,6453,6124,782
6,2217,8079,644
11,453
11,43410,36223,231
STATIONARY pOpUlatiOn
IN THE AGEINTERVAL
(51
L“X
97, 30(386,24(431,11(4T9, 931
477,58$472,56465,75,437, T11
447,26;432,72;413,1<387,2z
353,881312,96i264,89!210,25;
154,751105,274128,212
96,996384,78C479,12E477,711
474,44s466,384456,721445,37C
431,501413,168389,223358,353
319,722274,26o222,907168,106
113,98773,22083,325
97,611307,730483,132482,204
480,791478,122474’,304469,209
461,802450,657435,219414,360
386,833351,476307,853254,907
19 T,555142,167182,094
IN THIS ANDALL 3UB5EQUENTAGE INTERVALS
[6)
T,
6,528,79;6,431,49;6,045,25;5,564,1%
5,084,20~+,606,61!4,134,0513,668,30;
3,210,59;2,763,33[2,330,60f1,917,465
1,530,24>1,176,355
863,389598, 49(
388,238233,487128,213
6,131,8976,034,9015,650,1215,170,993
4,693,2764,218,3273,751,9433,293,222
2,849,8522,418,3512,005,1831,615,960
1,257,607937,885663,625440,638
272,332156,545
83,325
6,938,0266,040,4156,432,6055,969,333
5,431,3495,006,5584,528,4364,054,132
3,584,9233,123,1212,672,4642,237.245
1,822,8351,436,0521,084,576
776,723
521,816324,261182,094
AVERAGE REMAIN-ING LIFETIME
AVERAGE NUM8ERDF YEARS OF LIFE
REMAINING hT8EG1NNING OFAGE lNTERVAL
(71
65.366.462.757.9
53.048. + .44.139.7
35.431.327.523.9
20.617.614.912.5
10.79.17.7
61.362.558.954.0
49.244.740.636.5
32.528.624.921.6
18.515.713.311.2
9.78.57.5
69.470.466.761.8
57.052.247.542.9
33.534.230.126.3
22.719.416.413.7
11.59.67.8
5-10 SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES
Table 5-2. Number of Survivors at Single Years of Age, Out of 100,000 Born Alive, by Color’ and Sex: United Statw,
AGE
0-——-------—-——-—-——-—----1-- —------—----—-—--—---—---~_—-----________ --——— -----3-----—-——.—-—-—-----——-—
4—---------_____-—— ------~-—.---_____ —--_--_ ---—____6_—-------—___- ————_--——--7-—----—--—-——--—---—-—----~------_____ ---------_--—-— ------g__.--—_____—-------_—— _____
10——-—-----—----—-——--———
I l ---------------------------------12-——---——---_-———— _______~~_— __________________________14- —------------—-— ---------------15-—----— ---—-----——---—-—---lo------------— -------------------17-—--------- —---------——-.—--—18-—--------———---------—-—19-—------—-—----—-—--—--—----
20-------—--—-----_--_-----—--------21 —-------—-——----—---—-—---22-—-——--—-----------—-—----23--—---—— -------------------z4-—---------—___-__ —-----------~~------____-——— ________26-—--— -___ -———-_-_-_—27-—-—----—--__ —-—— _______28-—--—--—-_--———___29 ———-—-—__—-___——-———__ ———
30--— ------------------------31-—---———--—-——---——-——3* —---—--—-—---—-——-—-—33 ——---—---—----------—--—---34---—---————_——___35-—--————————————-3b------------____— --------------37--——------——--——--—--—--38-—------——-———--—---39-----—--—-—----—-----— -------
40 -—--—-----—-----——--—--——41-— ——————--——-—-— ---42-—--—___ —_—-—-— ---------43-—---__ -___-—--—----_—---44--—-——---—--—-—-—-——--45-—-—--—-—----—--—-—-———
46---------------—-——--— --------47 —---------—--—--——--—-—----48 —-----———---——---—-—-—-—-49------—---——------—--—--—---
50-----—----—__-— ___________51-——------—-_-—----— ---------52-— --------------------------------53---------—-—-----—-----——---~4---------—-____--—-— --------55------------— -----------------5b -—--—-----—----— ----------57------------—---- ———-—-------58-—------—-—-------____ -—_______59------------—__--_----—________
60--—--------—-------——— -------61-----------—-----—-—--—--—----62-—---------—------------—-—----63---——----—----——-——-—---64--------- —-—----——-——-——-65- —---------— --- —-—---—-—---66 ——-—--—-—---—-—- —-—---67- —-- ——---—-—-----—— --—---68------- ____ -—-_---- —----— -—___69-- —- —_____ -——-— ------
70-----—--—-——---——--—---7~-------____--_------_ ----—--—___72-— --- ——--—---——---—-- —---,3-—-—_____ ------_-—----74-------———----— -------------75 ——-—----——-——--—-—76-—-—--—-—--—————_— -----7,--—-—--——-—-———————78--—-----____._ -—----------79-—-—--——----—_—_ —______
80 —---—--————-————---81---—------—----———————-8~-—..--_——p————__———83 ——-———-—------—---—-—---84------------—-----——-—--—----85 ——-—___-___--—-—-_ —-—
1970,, 1
0TH 3EXES
100,00097,98497, 85991,77697, 70897,65397,59197,54297,50497,474
97,44897,42397,39597,35997,31297,25097,17197.07596,96496, 843
96,71596,58096,43796,29196,14596,00295, 86395, 72795,59295,454
95,31295, 16495,01094, 8479+, 67594,49194,29394,08093,04993,600
93,33093,03792,71892,37291,99591,58591,13990,65490.12889,559
88,94588,28387,57086, 80185,96985,06984,09683, 04981,92780,730
79,45010,10976,68075.16673; 56071,85870, 05868, 16066, 16564, 077
61,89859,63457,28654, 04752,30849,66446,92244,09741, 20838,279
35, 33+32,39+29,48026,61123, 80521.077
TOTAL
MALE
100,00097,74597,61297,52097,44397,38197,29097,23897,19697,165
97,13997,11397,08197,03696,97496,89096,7LLl96,64796,49L96,317
96,12895,92595,70895,48+95,26295,04994,04794,65594,46894,281
94,09093,89293,68793,47393,24993,01392.76392;49692,20991,899
91,56291,19490,79390,3578’3,88289,36688,80588,19687,53586,818
86,04285,.20404,29983,32082,25781,10379,85370,50777,96375,523
73,80672,15370,32468,39666,36664,23361,99859,66757,25154,761
52,21049,60846,96244,27541,5+538,77735,98333, 18030,39127,641
24,95+22,35419,86417,50415,29513,256
100,00098,23698,11998,04597,98797,94097,89797,85997,02697,790
97,77397,75097,72697,70097,66897,62997,58197,52597,46297,396
97,32897,25997,18797,11491,03996,96296,88396,80296,71896,630
96,53896,44196,33796,22596,10395,97095,82395,66295,48795,297
95,09394,87394,63694,37994,09993,79393,45993,09692,70492,282
91,82991,34390,82390,26589,66689,02388,33307,59306,00285,961
85,06984, L2283,11402,03700,80079,63578,29476,05475,30873,650
71,87569,98367,96965,81963,51561,04758,41555,62752,70049.652
46,50343,26939,96736,61133,21229,782
100,00098,21298, 10598,03197,96997,91897.86097, 01497,77797,740
97, 72397, 69997, 67297,63897, 59497,53597,46097, 36997,26497.151
97,03396,91096,78396,65496,52696,40296, .20396, 16796, 053.95. 939
95,82295,70195,57595.44295,30195, 15094,90794,31094.61894,409
94, 18093.93193.65093,35093,02892.66592,26691,82891,35090.029
90.26409.65280.98980.26901,48506,63285, 70604,70403, 62682,471
81,23879,92578,52977,04575.46673.78772.00670,12360, 13966, 056
63,87661.60459.24156.77854,20051,50246.600+5. 77542.70439.142
2.6.67533,60630,55827,55024.60121.726
MH17E I ALL 07 HER
HALE
100,0009?,99097,87597,79197,72097,66397,50697,52997,40797,456
97,43197,40697,37597,33397.27597,19591,09296,96596,8L896,655
96,48296,29896,10495,90695,71195,52695,35395,19095,03394,878
94,72194,55994,39394,2209+,03993,04793.64293,42193,18192,919
92.63292,31691,96091,5869L, L6690,70590,19809,64289,03488,370
87.64706,06106,00885,07934,06302,95201,74280,43279,01977,504
75,80674,16672,34470,41668,37966,23163,97461,61459,16L56.629
5+, o2551,37448,67045,91743,11240.25037,36734,45931.55028,690
25.98323,16L20,55018,07115.7+513.591
100.00098,44790.34798.28498 ,23L98,18798,14798,11298,08198,054
98,03C98,00897,98597, g6097,93097,09397,84797,79497,73597,673
97,61097,54897,48597,42197,35697,29097.22397,15597,08557,012
96.93596,85496,7689.,67596,51596,46596,34496,21296,06795,910
95,74095.55795.35895 ,L4094,90094,63594,34294,02r93,67093,291
92,88292,44291,96891 ,45e90,90990,317e9,67988,9938e ,257e7 ,472
e6,63685,74584,79483,77382,67381,40580,20278,0L877,32575,715
73,98172.12170,130b7.99165.68163,18560,50357.64554, b2a51,474
40.20444,03741,39137,88034,31830,7L5
100,00096.ee396,66596,53596,44196,36596,27596,21296,16796,133
96,10496,07496,03195,’39095,92895.a4e95,74795,62495,47795,30b
95,11294,89394,65094,30994,11993 .e4593,56993,28093.00192 ,7h4
92,39592,07291,73491,37891,0I3L90,60190,17389,722e9,230e8 ,720
88,16487,5b706,92986,248e5 ,52684,762e3,954e3,10132,20081,247
80,24079,1797e ,06176, e8575,64974,35272,9927L,57070,08663,542
66,93965,27063,56061,7e459,95158,06056,11754,12452,07149,970
47,80145,57243,29440,98938,68336,3973+,14731,94029,71927,669
25,61.23,631z21,72519,919L8,Z3blb ,703
1
KALE
100,00096,5449b,31796,18496,07195,98695,86795.79195,74495.713
95,60895,659‘35,61195,55795,47495,36495,22495,05094,04094,590
9+,30093,96693,59193,18792,77292,35e91,94991,54291,13190,709
90,270e9, e1139,333e8, e3588,3L787,77087,Z17e6,630eb. olz35,355
e4.65203,90083,09982,24981,354eo,41579,4327e,40177,3197b,lec
74,97573,71572.3es71 ,Ooc69,54S6e,03f66,46264,82f63,13561,387
59,53151,73155, e4c53,8~751,9LC49, s8247,82C45,72743,6034L,446
39,25937,04634,01032.59230,38828,22326,11224,06322,0e520,185
18,37316,6.5115,06313,59712,28411,14a
FEMALE
100,00097,23097,02096,89396,81Z96,73196,68896,63796,59596,559
96,5289L.,49896,46796,43396,39296,34296.28296,21196, L2996,036
;;::;;95, 69e95,56595,42395,27395,11594,94894,772g4, 587
;:: ;.3;
93,978‘3::3;
93,22092,91+92,57992,21491,818
91,39190,93Z90,43989,91189,347ee,746ee, f0787,42ea6,70785,943
e5,13484.27983,376ez,4z381,41680,35279,22978,04576, e0175,+96
14,13172,70471,21469,6566e,02766,32464,54962,10460,78358,776
56,68054,49452,23049,9L147,56045,22742,90140,59638,31036,042
~::;:;29,38L27,24623,18723,231
SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES 5-11
Table 5-3. Expectation of Life at Sinale Years of Age, by Color and Sex: United States, 1970
AGE
o.-----_____ -—_-_____ --—---------l—------------------------------
2—--------—-_—-—----——----—----3——--—.—--______ -—-----------
4--——--------———--------—----5——----_-—--—-____-—------—----6—---—____—.--___ -—--— ------7—--—--—---—---------------—----8--——_-------—-___-——--_ —----9——-------—----—-—--—--—----
lo-----------------------------------11---——-—-—-----——-——-—----
lo-----—-—--____-_ ------—--—----lo-----___ -_---_ --____-____ -—-------1+-—-------—--------— ------------15-——----—-—----—-—------—----
lo-—-----——-_----_ —--— --------lo-—------—___ -----—-_— ------~~--——____-----------— _________
19-----—-----------—-— ------------
do-—----------__ -_--—------_ -—----Al-—------__—— -----------------22 —-------——--—--—---.--—----23---------— -----------------------bit—--—--—-—---.--—-_-—-—________25---—_____ ---___—--— _______26-----------------------------------27 —-——------——--—--------—----~~—-------—_—---------__ —-----29--—----—___ --—____ —----------
30 —----------—---——----—-- —---
32--—-—_ —--—______ —--— --------33-—--—----— ---------------------34------------—-------— ------------35--—-—----——----------—-—----36----------_ -_------___ --—--------37-— --—-----—------- —------—----38 ——____-— ---------------------39-— -------------------------------
+O-—---——__—--_— --------------41----------------------------—----+2—--------__-__ --—----------------43--—-—---_____---_-— ------------44 ——-—------—_—--- —_________45--—---—------__-_--— ------------46--—-—-------___ --—--------------4~-—---------__----_ —------------48--—------——-------— _____________49-----------------------------------
do--—-—----—____ ——----_-—___51-—---------—___---— ----------5~----------------------------------53-------------------------------54--—-------_-----______ ——--—----55 -----------------------------------5b-----—______----_-—__ —------57----------------------------------~~_-_----_—_—-------_— ----------59-—-------_-__ -----— ------------
60-——-------------—-----—---—---
Al----- _____ -—--___ -——_—--— ---6*----------------------------------63------_ --—--_______ -—--— -------64--— -----—-—- ——----— ----------
65-----------------------------------be----— _------_ -—-__ — -----------
61-------------—------—---—-—----be-—--_-___ -------____ --— —--------69_____.-----—___----_ ---- _--—-----
do---— --------------------------7 l___________________________________72--—-----— ------------------------73--—----— ------------------------74-----—------—-—---— ------------75 —---—-—--------— ---------------76-—--— ----------------------------,,----—_—__—___ —------------70----------__-—--__--— ------------79----------------_ —---------------
s~-—-------------------------------8~—---—----------------------------82-—--_-_ —-----___—-----—_-—----83-----—--— -----------------------84--—___ -----— ---------------------85 --—-—------------------— --------
OTH
—
SEXES
70.971.370.469.568.567.566.665.664.663.7
62.761.760.759.758.857.856.955.955.054.0
53.152.251.350.349.448.547.646.645.744.8
43.842.942.041.040.139’.238.337.336.435.5
34.633.732.932.031.130.229.428.527.726.9
26.125.224.523.722.922.121.420.619.919.2
18.517.817.116.515.815.214.613.913.412.8
12.211.711.110.610.1
‘3.69.18.78.27.0
7.47.16.76.46.15.8
TOTAL
MALE
67.167.766.865.864.963.963.062.061.060.1
59.158.157.156.155.254.253.352.351.450.5
49.640.147.846.946.145.244.243.342.441.5
40.639.738.837.836.936.035.134.233.332.4
31.630.729.829.028.127.326.425.624.824.0
23.222.421.720.920.219.518.818.117.416.8
16.115.514.514.313.713.112.612.111.611.1
10.610.1
9.69.28. f8.48.C7.67.26.$
6.(6.:6.15.15.<5.2
FEMALE
74.875.174.273.372.371.370.469.460.467.4
66.565.564.563.562.561.660.659.650.757.7
56.755.854.853.952.951.951.050.049.148.1
47.246.245.344.343.442.441.540.639.638.7
37.836.936.035.134.233.332.431.530.629.8
28.928.127.226.425.624.823.923.122.321.6
20.820.019.218.517.817.016.315.614.914.2
13.612.912.311.711.110.510.0
9.48.98.5
8.07.67.16.86.46.1
BOTH
—
SEXES
71.772.071.170.169.268.267.366.365.364.3
63.462.461.460.459.458.557.556.655.654.7
53.852.851. g51.050.049.+48.247.246.345.3
44.443.442.541.540.639.738.737.836.936.0
35.134.133.232.331.530.629.728.828.027.2
26.325.524.723.923.122.321.620.820.119.3
18.617.917.216.615.915.214.614.013.412.8
12.211.611.110.510.0
9.59.08.68.17.7
7.36.96.66.35.95.7
wHITE
MALE
68.068.467.566.565.664.663.762.761.760.7
59.858.857.056.055.954.954.053.052.151.2
50.349.448.547.646.745.844.843.943.042.1
41.140.239.338.337.436.535.634.633.732.8
31.931.030.229.328.427.626.725.925.024.2
23.422.621.8
21.120.319.618.918.217.516.8
16.215.514.914.313.713.112.612.111.511.0
;::;9.69.18.78.37.97.57.16.8
6.56.25.95.65.45.2
FEMALE
75.615.874.973.973.072.071.070.069.168.1
67.166.165.164.263.262.261.260.359.358.3
57.456.455.454.553.552.551.650.649.748.7
47.746.845a44.943.943.042.041.140.139.2
38.337.336.435.534.633.732.831.931.030.1
29.328.427.526.125.825.024.223.422.621.8
21.020.219.418.617.517.116.415.715.014.3
13.612.912.311.611.010.5
9.99.48.98.4
7.97.57.06.76.36.0
30TH SEXES
65,366.465.564.663.762.161.860.859.958.9
57.956.955.955.054.053.052.151.250.249.3
48.447.546.145.844.944.143.242.341.440.6
39.738.838.037.136.335.434.633.833.032.1
31.330.629.829.028.227.526.026.025.324.6
23.923.222.52+.921.220.620.019.318.718.2
17.617.016.515.915.414.914.413.913.413:0
12.512.111.711.411.010.710.310.0
9.79.4
9.18.80.68.38.07.7
ALL oTHER
MALE
61.362.561.760.759.858.957.957.056.055.0
54.053.152.151.150.249.248.347.446.545.6
44.743.943.142.341.440.639.839.038.237.3
36.535.734.934.133.332.531.730.930.129.3
28.627.827.126.425.624.924.223.522.922.2
21.620.920.319.719.118.517.917.316.816.3
15.715.214.714.213.813.312.912.412.011.6
lL.210.910.510.2
9.99.79.49.28.98.7
8.58.38.28.07.87.5
FEMALE
69.470.469.568.667.766.765.764.863.862.8
61.860.959.958.957.957.056.055.054.153.1
52.251.250.349.448.547.546.645.744.843.9
42.942.041.140.239.338.537.636.735.935.0
34.233.332.531.730.930.129.328.627.827.0
26.325.524.824.123.422.722.021.320.720.0
19.418.718.117.516.916.415.815.214.714.2
13.713.212.812.411;911.511.110.710.310.0
9.69.28.98.58.27.8
—
5-12 SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES
Table 5-4. Life Table Values by Color and Sex Death-Registration States, 1900-1902 to 1919-21, and United States,
1929-31 to 1970
[Alaska and 23aw3ii fncluded for 1959 and 1960. For decennfal perlodz prior to 1929-31, data are for groups of registration States as follows: 1900-1902 and 1909-11, 10 States
and the District of Columbia: 1919-21, 24 States md the District of Columbia. For 1900-1902 to 1929-31, figures for ‘,all other, maIeqP znd ,<all other, female,, cover only
Negroes. However, ti no use did the Negro population comprise less thzn 95 perca”t of the correspontic ,Vall other,, populztionl
AGE, COLOR, AND SEX
WHITE, MALE
0----——-—————-———l-------__--_-— --------------5-----——--—-—-———--——-10----——-—-----—---—-15----—----——-------------—-20—-----——---------—---—-25-—-----——------—--—-—---30----—_ —-------------------35-----—--—--------------—-—
40---------- —-- —-- — ----------45--------—— _________________50-------——-----—--— ------55 —-----——-———-—-—----60 --------------— --------------65-----——----—--———---—-70--——--—----—-—---—-—--75—- — -—-------—---—--
80----—-——-——--—-—--——-85-—----—-------—--——---
ALL LITHER, MALE
0-—-——-—---—-----—-—---l--------— -----------------5-—-----—--—--------—--—---10 —--——-—-----—--—--—---15-----—-——-—----—-----—-20--------— --------------------25----—----—--------— --------30 —-----—-—--—---------—--35-----— -----------------------
40---- —-----—----- ——--------45 —------—- —---------— -—---50-------—--—-—---------—---55--------—--___----_— ________60---------— ---—---- ———--65----—-----—-----— ----------70----——-—------—-—-——-75 —------—-——-----—-—---80----------------------—------85--------—-———---—-—--
WHITE, FEMALE
0--------——--—------—-—---1-------—----------------—---5-----—-——-—-----—--—--10-----——-—--------—--—---15-------—-—---------—---—-20----—-——--------——-25-------—___ —--------------3 0----—--—---------—-——-35 —--—-——--------—--—---
40---- —--— ----------—----—-45 —--------- —-------— -------50--------—------—--—— ------55--------------—----—-—---60----—-—---—-——----—-65—--—----——--—--------—-70 —-------—-----------— ------75--------—-—-—----——---—-80-------——---------—--—---85----—-—------—--—-----—-
ALL OTHER, FEMALE
O--------———--------— -------1-----—-—-—---------——-5------———----------— ------10----—--—-—-—-----—-—-—1 5----——-—-------—--—-—zO--------—-— ----------------25----—— ----------------------30--------------—-----------—-35----—----—---------—----—-
40------------------------------45 --------------—----— --------50-------—-----—— ------------55-------——--------------—---60--------------—-----—--——-65-----—- —--- ——---— ------70—--——-—___--—— _______75-------— -- —- —----- —-------80----——--—--—--—-——-85-----——--—-—--—-— ------
L970
100, 000
97,99097,66397,43197,19596,48295,52694,72193, 847
92,63290,70587,64782,95275,88666,23154,02940,25825,88313,591
100.00096,54495,90695,68895,36494,30092,35890,27087,778
84,65280,41574,97968,03659,58749,88339,25928,22318,31311,140
100,00090,44798, 18798,03097,89397,61097,29096,93596,465
95,7409+, 63592,88290,31786,6368i.48573,98163,18548,20430,715
100,00097,23096,75196,52896,34295.93495;27394,39493,220
91,39180,74685, 13480,35274,13166,32456,68045,2.2733,79323,231
1969
100,00097, 86797,54797,31597,08296,33895,36894.54093, 68C
92,44690,50287,45282,73075,68765, 89453,85139,55625, 61513,754
100,00096.48295,93695,62495,26894,15092,30990,23087,606
04, 2L479,77374,29067, 18558.40248, 13436,31523,62715,751
9,970
100,000’38,39298,11997,95797, 01497,52797,20796,86296,385
95,65194,50592,79390,27086, 6438L,46073, 80662,57547,85930,290
100, 00097.14296,69196,47196,26995,81495,16594,25592, 878
90,87788,13084,46379,64373,16064.45952,339+0. 05530, 87921,626
NUMBER OF SURVIVORS OUT OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE
1959-61
100. Ooc97, 40E97.01596, 75f96, 50295.90895,10694,40193, 58$
92,42790,53387,42482, 46?75,48565,83453, 82540, 20725, 99313, 065
100.00095, 3019+, 57094,23493,87493, 10891.82590,27088,331
85,74482.07577.23970.35161,66951.39239.91429,06419.99411.620
100,00098, 03697,70997,52597.37597.13596, 8%96,49996, 026
95,32694,22892, 52289,96786, 33980,73972.50760,46144,67626,046
100.000
96.17295,54395, 26595.05794.66094,00593,07091,670
89,67686,79382.97977,36269.94160,82551,27+40, 54030.31519,744
1949-51
100,00(96,93]96.40!9$,06,95,72[95,10,94,29,93,48!92,54:
91,17:89,00:85,60]80,49(73, 17;63,54151 ,73!38,10126,00:12.01!
100, OOI94.91193,92193,45:92,96!91,94]90,28!88,3Z85,94(
82,83;78,68672,89165,12:55.53!45.19[35,01t25, 47;16,90~
9,89[
100,00(97.64597,19596,96C96,75(96,45496,07295,60594,977
94,08C92,72590,68587,69983.27s76,77367,54554.39738,02621,348
100, OOC95,91395.05594 ,67s94,3+393,54492,33690,79988,805
86,05202,25777,00770,19661,75852,35842,61232.98123,71215.550
1939-41
100,00095,18894,15093,60193,08992,2?391,24190,09268,713
86 ,88C84,20580,52175,15667,78758,30546,73s33,40419.860
9.013
100,00091,69689,92039,21183.417S6,77084,05580,86577,185
72,83067,51460,16652.86144,37035,91227,68819,76512,352
6,492
100,00096,21195,30994,89o94,53493,98493,22892,32091,211
89,30587,92085,26781,52076,20068,70158,36344,68528,88214,487
100,00093,31a91,71091,09290,36388,50525,96103.14779,079
75,90871.06164,38657,41949,10240,71832,57924,66317,15710,658
1929-31
100,00(93,76<91,73690,81<90,07488.904a7,37185,70783,81>
81 ,43i78,34574,28f68,98161,93:52,96,41 ,88(29,47117,2217,572
100,00[91 ,26E88,4128T,31186,15283,62179,51C75 ,08?70,04$
64,71C58,43251,76844 ,43t36 ,79C29,31421,74114,*15
8,2353,66C
100 ,Uoc95,03793,21t92,46691,89490,93989,52487,97286,248
04,25681,78070.57274,32160,46260,49943’,93237,02423,05310,931
100,00092,79690,18589,20188,08885,07881,06776,81672,192
67,27161,36554,92047.07438,76130,85223,34116.57610,8226,033
1919-21
100.00091,97536,84267,53086,54664,99783,06180,88878,441
75,73372,69669,10764,57458,49050,66340,87329,20517,655
8,154
100,00089,49985,19583,76382,33279,05774,54070,34465,073
61,35356,58951,88046,58140.50634,04226,92318,85411,615
5,605
100.00093,60890,72189,56488,71287.28185,16382,74080,206
17.62474,87171,54767.32361,70454,29944,63832,77720,492
9,909
100,00091,25187,14985,60783,95420.15475,35970,63365.857
61,13056,23050,78044,74237,95’431.04424,10717.21611,151
5.972
1909-11
100, Ooc87,67432,97281,51580,54$79, 11{77,04774,81<12, 10C
68,84165,11!60,74155,62:48,98;40, 8G31,52121,58:12, 16(
5, 14!
100, 00(78,06568, 58S66,37764,47E61,42<57,73!54, 07?49,865
45,414+0,56235, 42?29,75423, 75C17,80t12, 29!
7,4943,8941, 74T
100, OOC89,77483,34983,97983,09381,75079,86577,67615,200
72,42569,34165,6296L,05354,90047,08637,40226,56915,929
7,152
100,00081,49372,76870,50860,21864,76461,43058,28154,595
50,56845,94740,88635,41528,90022,30215,87110,657
6,3243,029
1900-1902
100,00006,65580,86479,10970:g
73,90771,21968,245
64,95461,36957,27452,49146,45239,24530,64021,3871;; ;:;
100,00074,67464,30561,73059,66756,73353,285fi;~;
42,98939,23034,76629,98724,19419,01513,829
8,8924,0312,030
100,00088,93983,42681,72380,68078,97876,58873,88770,971
67,93564,67761,0055b,50950,75243,80635,20623,36213,349
7* 149
100,00078,52568,05665,11162,38459,05355’79552,77349,567
46,1+642, z7937,68133,1Z427,52421,99516,140I::;g
3.567
SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES 5-13
Table 5-4. Life Table Values by Color and Sex Death-Registration States, 1900-1902 to 1919-21, and United States,1929-31 to 1970-Con.
[Alzzka md Hawztf Lucluded for 1959 znd 1960. For decennfzl periods prior to 1929-31, dztz are for wo.ps of registration S&tes as followfi 1900-1902 and 1909-11,10 Statesad the District of Columbi~ 1919-21, 34 Stztes ond the District of Columbia. For 1900-1903 to 1929.31, figures for ,,zfl ofier, mzfe,i znd IIall other, femzfe,, cover oniy
Negros. However, fn no case did thf legro poFuhtfon comprise less than 95 percent of the corresponding ‘,all other,, pop”htion]
AVERAGE NUMBER OF YEARS OF LIFE REMAINING
AGE, COLOR, AND SEX
HHITE,’ MALE
O—----—---—--.--_-— --------1-----—--——-----—-—--——.5-—------—--——------— -----10--------——--—----—---—.15----—--—-—-------— ______20--——-----—-__---— -----25---------_ --_-— _________30 —--—----—---—--- ——------35----—--—----------—-——-
40-------—------— ------------45----—-----—------------—---50 —--—-----— ________________55---------—----------—--——-60—------------—--——---—-65-— --—-——-—-—--—--—---70---------——-----————----75----—-—--— ----------80----—-—-—-----——-—---05---------——--------—--—---
ALL OTHER, MALE
0----- —---- ——— --------
1----------—-—----—--—-—5---— ———----—---—--—-—lo—--—--——__— ________15-----------—-----— ----------20 —-- —--—----------—--—---25-—-—--—_ —______3Q--------------------— -------35-----—--—----------—-—---
40----—--—-—-—----—--—---45--------—-----------— -------50 —------—--------—— -------55-----—----— -----------------60------------------------------65------- ———--——-———---70-------—-—-----—— _______75--—-------—-----——--—----80-----———-----—-———-05----—---------—-———--
UHITE, FEMALE
5----------------------— -------10—------—----— ___________15—--——---—----——--——-20---—----------—--—--—---25-—------—----------—-——30----—-—--—-------— ------35--------—--------—-— -------
40-----—--—-----------—-—---45-—-------—--—-—--— -------50----—-—--—------— __________55--------— —---------—-—---60----—----——------— ------65----— ---- —- —--- —-— -------do-----------—-— --------------
75------------------—--——-—-80--—----—-—-------——---—05---------------------— -------
ALL OTHER, FEMALE
0-—--—-—--—-----——-——-1--—-—-———-—----—-—---5--------—--—-—--—----—-lo----——-—___—— ------15 —----—--—--—----—----—20-----——--—-----——-——-25----—-—----—-——--—.—do------- —--------------------35---—------------—-——-—-
do—--— ----------------------45---------------------— --—-50----—-----—--------—-—-—-55--——-——---------—-—---60------------------------------65--------—-—--------———-do----—---— -----------------75--------—-----------—-—----.“-—--—----—--------—- —-—-
1970
68. !68.
.64.,59.,54.,50.45.1+1.36. !
31.,27. (23.,19. (16.;13.:10. !
8.:6.!5.:
61.:62. !58.!54. (49.:44.:40. (36. !32. !
28. <24. $21.118. !15.:13. ?11.2
9.?8.:7.5
75.675. e72. [67.162.257.452.547.743.0
38.333.129. ?25. C21.017.113.610.5
7.56.0
69.470.466.761.857.052.247.542.938.5
34.230. i26.322.719.416.413.711.5
9.67.8
1969
67. E68. >64.459. (54. i50.145.641. c36.3
31.827.423.319.516.013.010.4
8.26.34.6
60.561.758.053.248.443.939.835.631.6
27.024.220.817.714.912.610.910.4
9.48.4
75.175.371.566.761.856.952.147.342.5
37.833.228.824.520.516.613.0
9.97.14.8
68.469..465.760.856.051.246.542.037.5
33.329.325.421.818.515.713.712.110.0
8.2
1959-6L
67. 5!68.3<64.6159.7154.9:50.2:45.6!40. 9;36.31
31. V27.3423.2219.4516.0112.9710. 2s7.925.854.34
61. 4t63.5059.9855.1550.3S45.7841.3837.0532.81
28.7224.8921.2818.1115.2912.8410.81
8.936.875.08
7+.1974.6870.9266.0561.1556.2951.4546.6341.04
37.1332.5328.0823.8119.6915.8812.38
9.286.674.66
66.4768.1064.5459.7254.8550.0745.4040.8336.41
32.1620.1424.3120. e917.8315.1212.4610.10
T.6b5.44
1949-51
66.367.4,63.7’58.9!54.1149.5;44.9:40.2<35.6)
31.1.26.8.22.8:19.1115.7(12.7:10.0:
7.7:5.814.3!
58.9161. Ot57.6552.9(48.2:43.7?39.4535.3131.21
27.2S23.5S20.2:17.3614.9112.7510.74
8.837.075.3a
72. o372.7769.0964.2659.3954.5649.7745.0040.28
35.6431.1226.7622.5818.6415.0011.68
8.876.594.83
62.7064.3760.9356.1751.3646.7742.3538.0233.82
29.8226.0722.6719.6216.9514.5412.2910.15
8.156.15
1939-41
62.864.961.657.052.347.743.238.834.3
30.025.821.918.315.012.0
9.4,7.1’5.34.0;
52.3,56. 0!53.1:40.5943.9!39.7,35.9,32.2!20.6.
25.222. W19.1(16. K14.3112.1110.01
8.0:6.415.01
67.2!68.9?65.5760.8!56.0751.3[46.7S42.2137.7C
33.2:28.9C24.7220.7?L7. OC13.5610.5C
7.925.8e4.34
55.5158.4155.4750.8346.2242.1438.3134.5230.83
2T.3124.0021.0418.4416.1413.9511.81
9.808.006.38
1929-31
59.1:62.0<59.3154. 9(50.3$46. U41.7637.5433.32
29.2225.2f21.5117.9714.7211.77
9.2C7.025.263.99
47.5551.0848.6944.2739.8335.9532.6729.4526.39
23.3620.5917.9215.4613.1510.87
8.786.995.424.30
62.6764.9362.1757.6553.0048.5244.2539.9935.73
31.5227.3923.4119.6016.0512.81
9.907.565.634.24
49.515?. 3349.8145.3340.8737.2233.9330.6727.47
24.3021.3918.6016.2714.2212.2410.38
8.626.905.48
1919-21
56.3.60.2,58.354.1!49.7345.6141.6{37.6!33.7,
29.8(26.0(22.2;18.5!15.2!12.2:
9.517.3(5.G4.0(
47.1<51.6:50.1145.9541.7:38.3{35.5432.5129.54
26.5?23.5520.4117.5C14.7412.07
9.587.615.834.53
58.5361.5159.4355.1750.6746.4642.5538.72
.34.86
30.9426.9823.1219.4015.9312.75
9.947.625.704.24
46.9250.3940.7044.5440.3637.1534.3531.4828.58
25.6022.6119.7617.0914.6912.4110.25
8.376.585.22
1909-11
50.256.255.351.346.942.738.734.831.0
27.423.820.317.013.911.2
8.86.75.03.8
34.042.5:44.2!40.6!36.733.4830.4,27.3:24.4:
21.5.18.8!16.2113.8;Il.&
9.7,8.0(6.515.5:4.4(
53.6:58.6:57.6753.5;49.1;44.8t40.8E36 .9C33.0<
29 .2(25.4521.7418.lf14.9211.97
9.387.2C5.354.06
37.6745.1546.4242.8439.1836.1432.9729.6126.44
23.3420.4317.6514.9812.7810.82
9.227.556.055.09
1900-1902
+8. 235+.6154.+350.5946.2542.1938.5234.8831.29
“27.7424.2120.7617.4214.3511.51
9.036.845.103.81
32.5442.4645.0641.9038.2635.1132.2129.2526.16
23.1220.0917.3414.6912.6210.38
8.336.605.124.04
51.0856.3956.0352.1547.7943.77+0. 0536.4232.82
29.1725.5121.8918.4315.2312.23
9.597.335.504.10
35.0443.5446.0443.0239.7936.8933.9030.7027.52
24.3721.3618.6715.8813.6011.38
9.627.906.485.10
5-14 SECTION 5- LIFE TABLES
Table 5-5. Estimated Average Length of Life in Years, by Color and Sex: Death-Registration States, 1900-1928
AREA ANO YEAR
UNITED STATES
19 TD------------------------------1969—-—-----——----—-----——1968 ----—;---——----—-----—--—1967 -----__--______.-— ---------1966 —---——-————-—---—---
19&5 —-_-—--_.-____-—— --------1964 —-----—-—-------—----—-——19631 -------. -___-_ --—_________1962 x--------__—-__---— _________196 l—-—________-----— _______
1960 ---— -------------------—-—--—1959 ---——---J—--—-—--—_-—— _____1938 ——----_—_--—--— -------19 57----- ________—__------— --------1956 ---—------—-——-—--—-——--
19 55--——--_—---_---——— ------1954-----— --------------------------19 53-—-,——--——-—----——-—-—_19 52-----—---—-—---———---—--1951 ---—-----—------—--—---—---
1950 ------—--—-—-—-———--—-—-1949 -----——-—-------—-—--—-—-19+8 ______________________________1947 ---—________-_——— -------1946----------—---—---------——--
19+5---———-——-—---—----—----1944 -------------—------=-—----19+3 —------————-—-——---~g42—_-___--—__---_——__-1941 ---—-----------—-———-—----
194 D---——____-_—-___--—-——_-1939 ---——--—---—-------——----1938 —-------—-_ —--———-—_______1937---——--—-----—-———-——-1936 -----———---—-—--—-—----
1935 —-------___---_---— ---------1934 -----—-____-_—-— ___________
1933 -——-—----------—--—--—----1932 ---------___ -_ —-___ —----------193 1-——----———----------—----
1930 --—---——----------—-—----1929 —--------—-------—------—----
DEATH REGISTRATION STATES
1928 ------------—------—---—----192T----------—----------------—---1926 --—---——----—-—--—-—-—-
19 25 —-—--———--_—— -------1924 ------------------------------1923 —-----—-—--—-------—-—----1922 ----------—-----——--—--——--1921 ----------—----— --------------
1920 —---—--—-—-—-—--—--—----19 19---—--— —------———--—----19 18 —--------—------------—-—----1917 -----__—__—----__ —--__-__ —-191 b—-------_-_--———— ------
19 15 —-—----------------------------19 lo--— ---------------------------19 13 —-----— -—---———-----—--19 lo-----——___—--—— ------------19 11-------—-—----—-----—-—----
19 10 —--------—---—----------——--1909 -------—_ —---_ ----___---——-19 D8—------_-—--__-——___---——-19 D7----------—-. --—----—----— -----19 D6---—----—--__----——-— ______
1905 ---—-----.-7 ------——-—-——-1904 —-------—:----—--—----——--1903 -—----—-—---—-—---—----—-190 Z—--------—-_-..—_-—— _________1901 —-—--—-——-—-—-—-—----1900 ------—-——---——--—---—--
and United States, 1929-70[Estimates based on life ti
BOTH SEXES
70.970.470.270.570. r
7D.27D.269.970.07D.2
69.769.969.669.569.1
69.669.668.868.660.+
68.268.067.266.066.7
65.965.263.366.264.8
62.963.763.560.058.5
61.761.163.362.161.1
59.75T.1
56.360.456.7
59.059.757.259.660.8
54.154.739.150.951.7
54.554.252.553.552.6
50.052.151.147.640.7
48.747.650.551.549.147.3
TOTAL
T67.166.866.667.066.7
66.866.966.666.867.0
66.666.066.666.466.7
66.766.766.065.865.6
65.665.264.664. +64.4
63.663.662.464.763.1
60.862.161.958.056.6
59.959.361.761.059.4
58.155.8
55.659.055.5
::::
56.158.460. D
53.653.536.640.449.6
52.552. D5D.351.550.9
48.450.549.545.646.9
47.346.249.149.847.646.3
74.874.374.074.273.8
T3.773.773,473.473.6
73.173.272.972.7T2.9
72.8.72.872.071.671.4
71.170.769.969. T69.4
67.966.064.467.966.8
65.265.465.362.460.6
63.963.365.163.563.1
61.658.7
58.362.158.0
60.661.558.561.061.8
54.656.0+2.254.054.3
56.856.855.055.954.4
51.853.852.349.950.8
50.249.152.053.450.648.3
values shown fn tile 5.4]
WHITE
BOTH SEXES
71.771.371.171.371.0
71.071. D70.870.97L. D
70.670.770.570.370.5
7D.57D.569.769.569.3
69.168.868.06T.667.5
66.866.264.267.366.2
64.264.965. o61. +59.8
62.962.464.363.262.6
61.458.6
58.462. o58.2
60.761.458.3,60.461.8
54.955.839.852.052.5
55.154.953.053.953.0
50.352.551.548.149.3
49.148.050.951.949.447.6
MALE
68. [67.867.567.867. t
67.667.767.567.66T. f
67.467.56T.467.267.5
67.467.566.866.666.5
66.566.265.565.265.1
64.464.563.265.964.4
62.163.363.259.358.0
61.060.562.762.060.0
59.75T.2
57.060.55T. o
59.359.857.159.160.8
54.454.537. L49.350.2
53.152.750.351.951.3
48.650.949.946.047.3
47.646.649.550.248.046.6
FEMALE
75.675.174.975.114.7
74.774.674.474.474.5
74.174.273.9T3.173.9
73.173.773.072.672.4
T2.271.971.070.570.3
69.568.465.769.468.5
66.666.666.063.061.9
65.064.666.364.564.7
63.560.3
60.063.939.6
6z. 463.459.661.962.9
55.657.443.255.355.2
57.557.555.756.254.9
52.054.253.350.451.4
50.649.552.553.851.048.7
ALL OTHER
30TH SEXES
65.364.363.764.664.0
64. L64.1.53.664.164.4
63.663.963.463.063.6
63.763.+62.061.461. Z
60.360.660.059.T59.1
57.756.655.656.653.8
53.154.552.950.349.0
53.151.354.753.750.4
48.140.7
46.348.244.6
45.746.648.352.451.5
45.344.531.138.841.3
33.933.933.437.936.4
35.635.734.932.532.9
31.330.833.134.633.7,33.0
HALE
61.60.6D.61.60.
61.61.60.61.61.
61.61.61.60.61.
61.61.59.59.59.
59.58.’58.51.,57. !
56.55.155.,55.,32. !
51. !53.:51..48. !47. (
51.:50.;53. !52. (49.:
47.;45.;
45. (4T. (43.;
44. <45.:47. i51.:51.(
45.544.529. s37. C39. (
37.537.136.735.534.6
33.834.233.831.131.8
29.629.131.732.932.232.5
FEtlALE
69.468.467.560.267.4
67.467.266.566,861.0
66.366.565.065.566.1
66.165.964.563.863.4
6Z.962.7bz.561.961.0
59.657.756.158. Z55.3
54.956.054.35Z.551.4
55.253.756.054.651.5
49. Z47.8
41.048.945.6
46*T47.848.953.051.3
45.244.432.540.843.1
40::
40.340.038.2
37.537.336. D34,D33.9
33.132.734.636.435.333.5
,i1
!
1
I
I!
I
I
I1
I1
/’
I
I
.1
FILE
VITAL STATISTICS OF THE UNITED STATES, 1970–VOLUME II–MORTALITY
Part A
Section 1.
Section 2.
Section 3.
Section 4.
Section 5.
Section 6.
Part B
Section 7.
Section 8.
General Mortality
Summary tables containing crude, age-specWlc, and age-adjusted death rates; death ratesby cause; maternal mortality. Detailed tabulations of deaths by cause for the United Statesand each State. Data shown by age, sex, color and race, cause of death, ‘and month.
Infant Mortality
Tabdations of infant deaths and infant mortality rates by age, color, sex, cause of death,and by State. Additional frequency tables by month of death and by population-size groupsin metropolitan and nonmetropolitan counties.
Fetal Mort~ity
Tabulations of numbers of deaths and ratios by age of mother, legitimacy, geographic areas;fetal death rates by plurality. Numbers of deaths by additional characteristics-month, birthorder, attendant, period of gestation, birth weight.
Accident Mortality
Deaths from motor vehicle accidents by type of vehicIe and from nontransport accidents byplace of accident. Figures tabulated by age, color, and sex for the United States and by colorand sex for each State.
Life Tables (Separate release)
Abridged life tables and interpolated values of the lx and 8X by single years of age for thenational population by color and sex.
Technical Appendix
Text discussion of factors affecting the collection, classification, and interpretation of themortality statistics published in Volume II. Includes population tables for computing vitalrates.
Geographic Detd for Mortidity
Total number of deaths, deaths from selected causes, infant deaths, neonatal death, fetaldeaths, and selected rates and ratios. Tabulations shown by each State, county, specifiedurban places, metropolitan and nonmetropolitan counties, population-size groups, and stand-ard metropolitan statistical areas.
Puerto Kco and Virgin Islands
Trend of the crude death rate. Frequency tabulations for most characteristics shown in othersections of Volume II.
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FILE