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What Are the Harris-Walz Health Policy Team Reading?

Posted on | August 26, 2024 | 4 Comments

Mike Magee

Clearly the Harris-Walz ticket has been doing their homework. Last week, this book was spotted on one prominent thought-leader’s pile: “Human Evolutionary Demography.”  It’s a 780-page academic Tour de force led by veteran scientist Oskar Burger, leader of the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research and the Laboratory of Evolutionary Biodemography.

That’s the Institute founded in 1917 in Berlin. Their first director? Albert Einstein. These days, its researchers work (in an age of “alternate facts”) to separate justified belief from opinion. Their major focus is on “categories of thought, proof, and experience” at the crossroads of “science and ambient cultures.”

This is the field of Human Evolutionary Demography, a blending of natural science with social science. Demographers study populations and explore how humans behave, organize and thrive focusing heavily on birth, migration, and aging. 

This has been a year of just that in American politics. First, the fallout of the Dobbs decision caught Republicans with their electoral pants down in reproductive freedom referendums in Kansas, Michigan, Kentucky and Vermont. Southern migration of Democrats to former red states like Michigan, Arizona, Georgia, and North Carolina have turned them various shades of purple. And this summer, octogenarian candidates from both parties have been all the rage, literally.

Up until July 21, 2024. the race for the Presidency was between two aging candidates with visible mental and physical disabilities. The victor was destined to a term of office that would extend into his 80’s. 

The emergence of Kamala Harris as the Democratic nominee was a reflection of the electorates growing discomfort with turning a blind eye to the realities of aging. It also suggested that Americans, especially Gen X’ers, have grown tired of Boomer dominance in the lives of an increasingly multi-cultural America – tired as well of growing income disparity, attacks on reproductive freedom, and declining life expectancy in America.

But why the sudden interest in “Human Evolutionary Demography?” The answer lies in the numbers. Back in 2012 Oskar Burger studied Swedes and noted that in 1800 their life expectancy was 32 years. They gained an additional 20 years in the century that followed, and 30 more years by 2000. 

What stumped Burger was not the gains over these two hundred years. Instead he focused on the question, “Why did it take the human race so long to progress?” The bottom line is this, we left chimpanzees behind in the evolutionary dust some 6.6 million years ago. We limped along, not faring very well, for all but the last 200 years. In the past century, a moment in time spanning just 4 of our historic 8000 plus human generations, we took off. This period coincided with rapid scientific and technologic advances, cleaner air and water, greater nutritional support, improved education and housing, expanded public health related governmental policy, and establishment of a safety net for our most vulnerable citizens.

But in the past decade, growth in U.S. life expectancy has all but stalled. For the first time, we actually saw declines each year from 2014 to 2019. For the decade just past, the numbers improved by less than 1/2 of 1 %. When first studied, declines were blamed on losses in working age adults due to trauma, addiction, suicide or “deaths of despair.” 

But recent studies reveal losses due to poor maternal/fetal care, especially in red states, and made worse by fallout of the Dobbs decision. A second complicator has been losses starting at age 65 from complications of cardiovascular disease and diabetes, made worse by obesity and poor health care follow-up.

This has led the Max Planck Institute to issue an alert to U.S. health experts: “Our findings suggest that the U.S. faces a ‘double jeopardy’ from both midlife and old-age mortality trends, with the latter being more severe.” 

Women’s reproductive advocates say it’s really a “triple jeopardy” demanding grass roots advocacy focused on access today, and political victory up and down the ballot in November. In their words, “Today, and every day, we work to ensure that every patient who seeks sexual and reproductive health care can access it, and to build a just world that includes nationwide access to abortion for all — no matter what.”

If this is true, a careful read of “Human Evolutionary Demography” could direct a 3-prong health policy approach for the Harris-Walz campaign:

  1. Expanded safety net to address “deaths of despair.”
  2. Expansion of the ACC toward Universal Health Insurance to address burden of chronic diseases.
  3. Federal guarantees of reproductive freedom.

Comments

4 Responses to “What Are the Harris-Walz Health Policy Team Reading?”

  1. starnursingco
    August 29th, 2024 @ 2:43 am

    Great Article

  2. Mike Magee
    August 29th, 2024 @ 1:18 pm

    Thanks!

  3. Lawrence Williams
    August 29th, 2024 @ 1:53 pm

    Hey Mike,
    Hhmm..I better put on my Thinking Cap for this one.
    So 780 pages of “Human Evolutionary Demography” by Oskar Burger huh? And from the Max Planck Institute no less. That’s some heavy duty thinking. And all that thinking could very reasonable lead to your conclusion that the Harris-Walz ticket would adopt a “3-prong health policy approach” as you describe, that would serve all Americans regardless of political beliefs. However I am not sure that proudly presenting such a health policy and its derivation from the Max Planck Institute, a place most MAGA Trumpies have never heard of and written by some guy with a name that makes them think of a Whopper from Burger King, would win the Harris-Walz ticket any new support in red political territory. But it will certainly be impressive to all Americans with more than 10 functioning brain cells.
    My best to you and Patricia as always.
    Larry Williams

  4. Mike Magee
    August 30th, 2024 @ 2:16 pm

    Thanks, Larry! Hope springs eternal. As for “the whopper,” Trump’s reversals on abortion and IVF certainly qualify. Though, I expect his Evangelical supporters know he’s only kidding. Best, Mike

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