Los Angeles County Life Expectancy Gap Tops 16 Years

In Los Angeles County, your ZIP code is still a pretty good predictor of how long you are likely to live. A new countywide portrait finds a gap of more than 16 years in life expectancy between some neighborhoods, a stark divide that tracks closely with long-standing differences in wealth, education, and access to opportunity.

The report pegs countywide life expectancy at about 80.5 years, a drop of roughly 1.6 years since the prior portrait. At the top end, residents of Westwood average roughly 88.1 years. At the other extreme, people living in Sun Village in the Antelope Valley average about 71.8 years. Taken together, the numbers trace a county split between well-resourced coastal neighborhoods and inland communities facing concentrated health, education, and economic shortfalls.

How the report measures well-being

The portrait relies on the American Human Development Index, which combines three core measures into a single score from 0 to 10: life expectancy, educational attainment, and median personal earnings. That composite score makes it possible to compare neighborhoods on a level playing field and see where residents are faring better or worse overall.

Measure of America says this framework helps highlight where investments and services can have the greatest impact on well-being. Its county page and data tools provide Human Development Index scores for 106 cities and unincorporated areas, 35 City of Los Angeles community plan areas, and major demographic groups, according to Measure of America.

Big gaps, little progress

While the county’s overall Human Development Index inched up to 5.64, the life expectancy picture moved in the opposite direction. Countywide life expectancy slipped to about 80.5 years, and the gap between the longest and shortest living communities now tops 16 years, with Westwood at roughly 88.1 years and Sun Village at about 71.8…

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