
Understanding why people live shorter or longer lives isn’t just a matter of health care. It’s about the conditions we live in, how we invest in our communities, and how structural systems shape opportunity. Recent county-level mortality data from County Health Rankings & Roadmaps reveal powerful patterns that must inform how we think about prevention at every level. You can explore the full data spotlight here:County Health Ranking & Road Maps.
Life Expectancy and the U.S. Longevity Puzzle
Despite advances in medicine, overall life expectancy in the U.S. has not improved meaningfully over the past decade and remains lower than in other high-income countries. This stagnant trend is evident across many parts of the country in county-level death data.
This plateau signals a unique longevity problem—one that isn’t caused solely by individual behaviors (such as smoking or diet) but also by broader community conditions and policies.
Leading Causes of Death: Chronic Disease and Injury Still Top the List
Across US counties, the leading causes of death remain a mix of chronic diseases and injuries:
- Chronic conditions such as heart disease, cancer, and diabetes continue to be major contributors to mortality.
- Injury deaths, including drug overdoses, motor vehicle crashes, and firearm-related incidents, especially at younger ages, are prominent and persistent drivers of premature mortality.
Fundamentally, these patterns show us two things:
- Mortality is deeply tied to social and economic conditions—not just health care access.
- There’s a clear need for coordinated, upstream strategies that prevent risk factors from ever developing into fatal outcomes.
Suicide and Rural Health Disparities
One of the most striking patterns in the updated mortality data is the uneven distribution of suicide rates: Suicide rates in rural counties are nearly twice as high as those in large metropolitan counties.
Locally, Johnson County has seen a troubling long-term trend: suicide is now the fourth leading cause of premature death in the county, with roughly one life lost every four days. Since 2006, the number of suicide deaths has risen approximately 67%, underscoring the urgency of sustained local prevention investment.
This isn’t random; it reflects fewer local health resources, social isolation, economic stress, limited broadband access for telehealth, and other structural challenges that compound risk in rural areas.
Understanding these differences is essential for targeting prevention efforts where they are most needed, from rural communities struggling with mental health access to urban areas facing different but equally serious risks.
Prevention Works: Evidence-Based Strategies for Change
While the data paints a sobering picture, it also highlights that change is possible when communities act together. The County Health Rankings initiative pairs these mortality insights with effective solutions, from harm-reduction strategies for overdose prevention to policies that strengthen economic opportunity and increase access to care.
Examples of proven approaches include:
- Policies and enforcement that reduce injury deaths (e.g., seat belt laws, impaired driving enforcement).
- Harm reduction strategies like naloxone distribution and syringe services can cut overdose deaths. Access to naloxone and naloxboxes is available locally.
- Expanded access to mental health services, particularly in underserved and rural communities — including peer support groups and mutual aid networks like SMART Recovery.
Data is a Starting Point — Action is Next
What this county-level mortality data makes clear is that life expectancy and early death aren’t evenly distributed. They reflect where resources are invested (or withheld) and how systems either support or hinder healthy lives. Stay tuned for our upcoming data insight piece for more.At Upstream Prevention, we believe prevention starts before illness, injury, or despair occurs. That means investing in the conditions that foster long and healthy lives: safe neighborhoods, economic opportunity, equitable access to care, and policies rooted in health equity. Learn more about our approach here.
