I’ve been living in South Africa for seven years, and I’m quite fortunate. I have a great opportunity to do good things with my life (and the opportunity to do good things with my body after I get out of here). I’m not sure if life expectancy is better in South Africa than in the US, but that’s a topic for another blog post.
Im not sure if life expectancy is better in South Africa than in the US, but im not sure if life expectancy is worse in South Africa than in the US either. South Africa has a lot of problems with HIV/AIDS, so maybe its better to live a long life to be safe.
But there’s another good reason to live a longer, healthier, productive life. People in South Africa are much more likely to live longer lives than people in the US. And people in South Africa are more likely to die before they reach a ripe old age. I think there are multiple factors that could explain this difference, so I have no definitive answer.
The biggest reason for this difference is the different life expectancies. In the US, life expectancy rises each year, and the average life expectancy is about 75. People who live longer in South Africa are more likely to live longer. The reason for this is that there are more people living longer lives there. That means there are more people who die at a younger age than in the US. The average age of death in South Africa is also lower.
The fact is that many South Africans are living longer lives, but they’re not doing so because of better health care. Life expectancy is the number of years a person’s life is expected to last before they die. According to a 2012 study, “life expectancy at birth,” was 82.6 years in South Africa, but this number has increased yearly, and it means that the average life expectancy now in South Africa is 89.8 years.
Now, if you look at the data, you will see that South Africans are living longer lives, but theyre not doing so because of better health care. The reason South African life expectancy is higher is because the country has lower infant mortality rates. In South Africa, infant mortality is the number of deaths in a live birth occurring before the age of one. Here’s how it works: in the first 3 months of life, the first 10 babies are looked after by the state.
So when South Africans start having babies, their chances of passing away at that age, the first 10 babies, are only 1.6% (this is in 2007 and so is less than any other country in the world) while in the rest of the world they are 33.3%.
It’s not just South Africa though, as it was recently found that a significant number of US babies are born alive, but that they are able to live, and that the number of babies born who die before they are 1 year old is quite high in the US, and in other developed countries as well.
In the US, the data says that about 3% of babies born in the US are born alive and that 40% of these babies are born alive because of problems with the health care system. In South Africa, the data says that about 16% of babies born in South Africa are born alive, and the number of babies born alive in the US is about 25%. This is quite a big difference.
It’s not exactly news that there are problems with the health care system in the US, but you would think that would be the point. The problem is that the US is actually one of the most health-conscious countries in the world because we have a very high infant mortality rate. In South Africa, on the other hand, we have a relatively low infant mortality rate.