U.S. DECENNIAL LIFE TABLES FOR 1959-61

40

Transcript of U.S. DECENNIAL LIFE TABLES FOR 1959-61

NATIONALCENTER

For HEALTHSTATISTICS )

DATA FROM THE NATIONAL CENTER

FOR HEALTH STATISTICS exLIFETABLES: 1959-61

VOLUME I - NO. 5

LIFE TABLESFORMETROPOLITAN

ANDNONMETROPOIITANAREAS

OFTHEUNITEDSTATES: 1959-61

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION,

John W. Gardner, Secretary

PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE

William H. Stewart, Surgeon General

AND WELFARE

Washington, D. C. December 1967

NATIONAL CENTER FOR HEALTH STATISTICS

THEODORE D. WOOLSEY, Di?’e cjoT

PHILIP S. LAWRENCE, SC. D., Associate Director

OSWALD K. SAGEN, PH-D-,,, Assistant Director for Health Statistics Development

WALT R. SIMMONS, M. A., Acting Assistaat Director for Research and Scientific Development

ALICE M. WATERHOUSE, M. D., Medical Consultant

JAMES E. KELLY, D. D. S., Dental Advisor

LOUIS R. STOLCIS, M. A., Executive O//icer

DONALD GREEN, reformation Officer

DIVISION OF HEALTH RECORDS STATISTICS

MONROEG. SIRKEN, PH. D., Chief

PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE PUBLICATION NO. 1252 - VOLUME I-NO. 5

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, u.S. Government Printing OfficeWashington, D. C., 20402- Price 30 cents

CONTENTS

Page

~~troduction ----------------------------------------------------------

Methodolo~ ----------------------------------------------------------

Table

1. Life table for the total population in metropolitan areas: United States,1959-61 --------------------------------------------------------

2. Life table for the white male population in metropolitan areas: UnitedStates, 1959-61 ------------------------------------------------

3. Life table for the white female population in metropolitan areas: UnitedStates, 1959-61 ------------------------------------------------

4. Life table for the nonwhite male population in metropolitan areas: UnitedStates, 1959-61 ------------------------------------------------

5. Life table for the nonwhite female population in metropolitan areas:United States, 1959-61 ------------------------------------------

6. Life table for the total population in nonmetropolitan areas: UnitedStates, 1959-61 ------------------------------------------------

7. Life table for the whitemalepopulationtinonmetropolitan areas: UnitedStates, 1959-61 ------------------------------------------------

8. Life table for the white female population in nonmetropolitan areas:United States, 1959-61 ------------------------------------------

9. Life table for the nonwhite male population in nonmetropolitan areas:United States, l959-6l-----------------------=------------------

10. Life table for the nonwhite female population in nonmetropolitan areas:United States; 1959-61 ------------------------------------------

11. Proportion of persons dying during the year at specified ages by colorand sex: Metropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas within geographicdivisions, 1959-61 ---------------------------------------------

12. Number surviving to specified ages out of 100,000 born alive by colorand sex Metropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas within geograp~icdivisions, l959-6l----------------------------------*----;-----

13. Average remaining lifetimein years at specified agesby color and sex:Metropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas wi~hin geographic divisions,1959-61 -------------------------------------------------------

1

2

5

7

9

11

13

15

17

19

21

23

25

28

31

LIFE TABLESFORMETROPOLITANANDNONMETROPOIITANAREASOFTHE UNITEDSTATES: 1959-81

Introduction

This reportcontainslifetablesforthemet-ropolitanandnonmetropolitanareasoftheUnitedStatesfor1959-61.1Detailedlifetablesbysingleyearsof age are presentedforthetotalpopula-tion,whitemales,whitefemales,nonwhitemales,and nonwhitefemales.For eachoftheninegeo-graphicdivisions,excerptsfrom themetropoli-tan-nonmetropolitanlifetablesaregiveninthreeadditionaltables.The firstof thesesummarytablesshows singleyear probabilitiesofdeath,qx, at ages O, 21,45,and65.The secondgivesthenumber ofsurvivors,IX, atages21,45, 65,and85from a cohortof100,000births.The thirdshows singleyearprobabilitiesofdeath,q~, atagesO,2s1,45,and65.

The geographicdivisionsandtheStatestheyincludeareasfollows:

N~ ENG-MaineNew HampshireVermontMassachusettsRhodeIslandConnecticut

MI~~Y~ATANTIC

New JerseyPennsylvania

EASTNORTHCENTRALOhioIndianaIllinoisMichiganWisconsin

WESTNORTHCENTRALMinnesotaIowaMissouriNorthDakotaSouthDakotaNebraskaKansas

SOUTHATLANTICDelawareMarylandDistrictof ColumbiaVirginiaWestVirginia

SOUTH ATLANTIC-Con.NorthCarolinaSouthCarolinaGeorgiaFlorida

F.ASTSOUTHCENTRALKentuckyTennesseeAlabamaMississippi

WEST SOT.iTHCENTRALArkansasLouisianaOklahomaTexas

MOUNTAINMontanaIdahoWyomingColoradoNewMexicoArizonaUtahNevada

PACIFICWashingtonOregonCaliforniaAlaskaHawaii

For allgeographicdivisions,exceptNewEngland,a metropolitanareaisdefinedasacountyor groupofcontiguouscountiescontainingatleastone cityof 50,000or more inhabitantsor “twincities”wi~ a combined-populationof at least50,000in the 1960census.Contiguouscountiesthat did not containa citywith a populationof at least50,000were consideredmetropoli-tan if they were judgedessentiallymetropoli-tanin characterandwere sociallyandeconomi-callyintegratedwith a cityor citieshavingapopulationofatleast50,000.Eachcountyorgroupof contiguouscountiesthatsatisfiesthe abovedefinitioniscalleda“standardmetropolitansta-tisticalarea(SMSA).”2InNew England,thedefi-nitionof SMSA uses towns and citiesinsteadofcountiesas geographiccomponents.Sincebirthanddeathdatawere notavailableforthesetownsandcities,a differentunit,themetropolitanStateeconomicarea(MSEA),3whichisbasedoncountyunits,was used inpreparingthelifetablesformetropolitanand no~metropolitanlifetablesforNew England.

btherpublishedreportsoftheNationalCenterforHealth

Statistics’ decennial life table progmm are as follows:

Life Tables: 1959-61, PHS Pub. No. 1252-VO1. k

“United States Life Tables: 1959 -61,” No. 1.

“Actuarial Tables Based on the United States Life Tables:1959 -61,” No. 2.

“Life Tables for the Geographic Divisions of the United

States: 1959 -61,” No. 3.

“Methodology of the National, Regional, and Stak Life

Tables for the United States: 1959 -61,” No. 4.State Life Tables: 1959-61, Vol. 2, Nos. 1-51.

2For discussion of SMSA’S, see U.S. Bureau of the Cen-

sus, United States Census of Population: 1960, Number of ln-fiabitazts, United States Svmma~, Final Report PC(l)- 1A,

Washington, U.S. Government Printing Office. 1960: and U.S.

Bureau of the Budget, Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas;Washingbn, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1961.

3For discussion of MSEA’S, see U.S. Bureau of the Cen-

sus, State Economic A?eas, Washingbn, U.S. GovernmentPrinting Office, 195~ and the first reference cited in footnote

1. For the 1960 listing of MSEA’S used for New England, see

National Office of Vital Statistics, Vital Statistics Instruc-tion Manual, Part II, Supplement No. 3 to Section C. “Geo-graphic Code- 1960-61 (Final), ” Washington, 1961.

1

United States life tables for metropolitan andnonmetropolitan areas are being published for thefirst time in this report. The most recent nationallife tables that can be compared to these are the1939 urban-rural life tables for the United States.4The 1939 urban-rural tables were preparedon thebasis of a three-way breakdown with one ruraland two urban classes. The urban population wasdefined as that residing in incorporated placeshaving 2,500 inhabitants or more, with certainmodifications in the New England States. Urban-rural life tables were not prepared in the presentseries of tables because vital statistics were notavailable on the basis of the definitions of urbanand rural used in the 1960 census.

Methodology

The basic methodology used in the preparationof the metropolitan-nonmetropolitan life tableswas the same as that used to construct the na-tional, geographic division, and State life tablesexcept for two special adjustments needed to fillgaps in the metropolitan-nonmetropolitan data. Areport of the general methodology of the 1959-61life tables has been published separately; 5 how-ever, the procedure is outlined here so that thespecial adjustments in the metropolitan-non-metropolitan data can be described.

The principal data for the life tables werethe 1960 census of population figures provided bythe Bureau of the Census and death.: occurring in

%.s. Department,of Conrnrerce, 3“,,.” IJf ,~, ~,n.u.,United States Abridged Life Tables, 1939, U~ban and Rural byRegions, Color, and Sex, 19.4,3(reprinted as Vital Statistics-Special Reports, Vol. 23, No. 15, June 30 1947).

5“Methodology of the National, Regional, and State Life

Tables for the United States: 1959 -61,” PHS Pub. No. 1252-Vol. 1, No. 4.

the United States during the 3-year period 1959-61. In order to arrive at more reliable mortalityrates at the youngest ages, where census data aresignificantly affected by underenumeration, usewas made of reported births for each of the years1957 to 1961.

The first gap in the metropolitan-nonmetro-politan data was the distribution of the populationat ages 85 and over. The combined metropolitanand nonmetropolitan population was available by5-year age groups but only the combined popula-tion for all ages 85 and over was available formetropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas sepa-rately. The ratios of the population in S-year agegroups to the total 85-and-over population werecomputed for the combined metropolitan-nonmet-ropolitan data. A set of such ratios was derivedfor each color, sex, and geographic divisioncombination, and these ratios were applied sepa-rately to the metropolitan and nonmetropolitanpopulation at ages 85 and over. In other words,the assumption was made that (within each sub-division by sex, color, and geographic division)the metropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas sepa-rately had the same age distribution within thetotal age group 85 years and over as the combinedmetropolitan and nonmetropolitan population.

The other gap in the data was in the birthsfor the years 1957-59 for metropolitan and non.metropolitan areas. The births were available formetropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas by sex orcolor, but not by sex and color. The gap wasfilled by assuming that the sex ratio at birth fornonwhites is the same for both metropolitan andnonmetropolitan areas. This assumption provideda distribution of nonwhite births in any geograph.ical area by sex and by metropolitan-nonmetro.politan classification. A similar distribution ofwhite births could then be obtained by subtraction.

2

! EXPLANATION OF THE COLUMNS OF THE LIFETABLE(Figures used for illustration are from table2)

Colurnnl-Age interval(x to x + t.) —Theage interval shown in column 1 is the intervalbetween the two exact ages indicated. For instance,“3-28 days” means the 25-day interval betweenthe exact ages of 3daysand28days, and “43-44years” means the intervalofl year between the43d and 44th birthdays. In thelife tables in thisreport the age interval is always 1 year exceptin the case of subdivisions of the first year oflife.

Column 2—P~oportion dying (tqX.)—Thiscolumn shows the proportion of the membersofthe life table cohort, alive at the beginning of theindicated age interval who will die before reach-ingthe end ofthat ageinterval(in most instances,the next birthday). For example, for white males(table 2) in the age interva13-28 days, the pro-portion dying is .00370 out of every 1,000 whitemale babies surviving 3 days after birth, 3.70will die before reaching the age of 28 days. Simi-larly, for white males in the age interval 43-44years, the proportion dying is .00449 out of every1,000 white males reaching their 43d birthday,4.49 ‘will die before reaching their 44th birthday,on the basis of the mortali~ rates of 1959-61.When the age interval is 1 year, the symhlqX (instead of ~qx) is generally used for the

proportion dying.Column 3–Numbe~ surviving (IX.) -This

column shows the number of persons, startingwith a cohort of 100,000 live births, who surviveto the exact age marking the beginning of the in-dicated age interval. Thus, out of 100,000 whitemale babies born alive, 98,424 will survive 3 days,97,483 will complete the first year of life andenter the second, 96,006 will reach age 21, and38,879 will live to age 75.

Column 4—Number dyi~ (t dx.)— This col-umn shows the number dying in each successiveage interval out of 100,000 live births. Thus, outof 100,000 white males born alive, 364 die be-tween the ages of 3 and 28 days, 2,517 die in theentire first year of life, and 413 in the year be-tween their 43d and 44th birthdays. Evidently,each figure in column 4 is the difference between

two successive figures in column 3. When the ageinterval is 1 year, the symbol dX (instead of~dx is generally used for the number dying.

Columns 5 and 6—Stationavyfiopula tion (t L,and LX)—Suppose that a group of 100,000 personslike that assumed in columns 3 and 4 is born everyyear and that the proportions dying in each groupin each age interval throughout the lives of themembers are exactly the same as those shown incolumn 2. If there were no migration and if thebirths were evenly distributed over the calendaryear, the. survivors of these births would con-stitute a stationary population— stationary be-cause in such a population, the number of personsliving in any given age interval would neverchange. When an individual left an age interval,whether by death or by growing older and enteringthe next higher age interval, his place wouldimmediately be taken by someone entering fromthe next lower age interval. Thus, a census takenat any time in such a stationary community wouldalways show the same total population and thesame numerical distribution of that populationamong the various age intervals. In such a sta-tionary population supported by 100,000 annualbirths, column 3 shows the number of personswho, each year, reach the exact age that marksthe beginning of the age interval indicated incolumn 1, and column 4 shows the number of per-sons who die each year in the indicated age in-terval.

Column 5, *L ~, shows the number of per-sons in the stationary population in the indicatedage interval. For example, the figure shown forwhite males in the age interval 3-28 days is6,723. This means that in a stationary populationof white males supported by 100,000 annual birthsand with proportions dying in each age intervalalways in accordance with column 2, a censustaken on any date would show 6,723 persons be-tween the exact ages of 3 and 28 days. Similarly,the figure for white males in the year of life 43-44 is 91,782. Thus, the stationary populationdescribed would always contain 91,782 personsbetween their 43d and 44th birthdays. When the

3

age interval is 1 year, the Symhl L ~ is gener-ally used instead of ~L,.

Column 6, TX, shows the total number ofpersons in the stationary population (column 5)in the indicated age interval and all subsequentage intervals. For example, in the stationarypopulation of white males described inthepreced-ing paragraph, column 6 shows that there wouldbe at any given moment a total of 6,747,440 whitemales who have survived at least 3 days followingbirth, and a total of 2,637,880 white males whohave attained age 43. me population at all ages Oand above (in other words, the total white malepopulation of the stationary community) would be6,748,252.

Column 7—Avevage remaini~ lifetime(:x. ) —The average remaining lifetime (alsocalled expectation of life) at any given age is theaverage number of years remaining to be lived bythose surviving to that age, on the basis of a givenset of age-specific rates of dying. In order torelate these figures to the preceding columns ofthe life table it is necessary to observe that thefigures in column 5 of the life tables can also beinterpreted in terms of a single life table cohortwithout introducing the concept of the stationarypoptiation. From this point of view, each figurein column 5 represents the total time (in years)lived between two indicated exact ages by all thosereaching the earlier age among the survivors of acohort of 100,000 live births. Thus, the figure6,723 for white males in the age interval 3-28days is the total number of years of life lived be-tween the exact ages of 3 and 28 days by the 98,424

(column 3) who reached the age of exactly 3 daysout of 100,000 white males born alive. The corre-sponding figure 6,747,440 in column 6 is the totalnumber of years lived after attaining the age of 3days by the 98,424 reaching that exact age. Simi-larly, the figure 91,782 in column 5 for whitemales in the year of life 43-44 is the total numberof years lived between their 43d and 44th birthdaysby the 91,989 (column 3) who reached the 43dbirthday out of the original cohort of 100,000 andthe corresponding figure 2,637,880 in column 6is the total number of years lived after attainingage 43 by the 91,989 reaching that age.

~is number of years divided by the numberof persons 2,637,880 divided by 91,989 gives28.68 years as the average remaining lifetime atage 43. A similar division of 6,747,440 by 98,424gives 68.55 years as the average remaining life-time at the age of 3 days.

Care must be exercised in drawing conclu-sions from the figures in column 7. Thus, in ob-serving that the average remaining lifetime ofwhite persons is greater than that of nonwhites,one should not conclude that the oldest agesreached by white persons necessarily exceedthose attained by the most long-lived among thenonwhite. The difference in average length of liferesults from the fact that a greater proportion ofnonwhites die before reaching old age. For ex-ample, the proportion surviving to age 65 is fargreater among whites than among nonwhites; yetthe average length of life remaining at age 65 isnearly the same for both groups.

4

TABLE 1. LIFE TABLE FOR TRE TOTAL POPULATION IN METROPOLITAN A~S : UNITRD STATES, 1959.61

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+f

DAYS

o-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-3................3-28 ...............28-365 .............

YEARS

o-1: ...............1-2................2-3................3-4................k-5................

5-6................6-7................7-8................8-9................9-10...............

10-11..............11-12..............12-13..............13-14..............14-15..............

15-16..............16-17..............17-18..............18-19..............19-20..............

20-21..............21-22...............22-23 ..............23-24 ..............24-25.............-

25-26..............26-27..............27-28 ..............28-29 ..............29-30 ..............

30-31..............31-32..............32-33..............33-34..............3+-35 ..............

35-36..............36-37 ..............37-38 ..............38-39..............39-40 ..............

40-41 ..............41-42 ..............42-43 ..............43-44 ..............44-45 ..............

45-46 ..............46-47 ..............47-48 ..............48-49 ..............49-50 ..............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

]eginning oflge interval~ying duringinterval

(2)

Iqx

O.U1O56.00455.00366.00640

.024%

.00150

.00095

.00074

.00063

.00055

.00049

.00045

.00040

.00037

.00034

.00034

.00036

.00043

.00052

.00062

.90072

.00081

.00088

.00093

.00099

.00105

.00109

.00111

.00112

.00112

.00113

.00115

.00120

.00127

.00135

.00144

.00154

.00164

.00175

.00188

.00203

.00222

.00244

.00269

.00298

.00329

.00364

.00401

.00442

.00486

.00534

.00589

.00652

.00722

OF 100,000 BO~ ALIVR

Numberliving at

>eginning oflge interval

(3)

1,

100,00098,94498,49498,134

100,00097,50697,36097,26797*195

97,13397,08097,03296,98996,950

96,91496,88196.8+896,81396,771

96,72196,66296,59296,514,96,42’3

96,33996,2’4496.14296,03795,930

95.82395,71695,60995,49995,384

95,26395,13594*99794,85194,696

94.53094,35294.16193,95293,723

93,471.93,19292*88592;54792,176

91,76891,32290,83490,29989,710

Yumber dyingduring

age interval

(4)

,dx

1,056450360628

2,494146937262

534a433936

3333354250

5970788590

95102105107107

107107110115121

128138146155166

178191209229252

2793073383-I1408

446488535589647

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

273540

6,72890,323

97,86497,43397.31397,23197,164

97*10797,05697,01096,96996,932

96,89796,86496.83096,79296,747

96,69196,62796,55496,47196,384

96,29296,19396,09095,98495,876

95,77095,66395,55395,44195,324

95,19995,06694,92494,77494,613

94,44194,25694*05793,83793,597

93,33193,03992.71692;36191,972

91,54591,07890,56790,00589.386

In thisand all

subsequent~ge intervals

(6)

T,

6,983.0146,982,7416,982,2016,975,473

6,983,0146,885,1506.787,7176,690,4046,593,173

6,496,0096,398,9026,301,8466,204,8366,107,867

6,010,935,5,914,0385,817,1745,720,3445,623,552

5,526.8055,430,1145,333,4875,236,9335,140,462

5,044,0784,947,7864.851,5934,755,5034,659,519

4,563,6434,467,8734,372,2104,276,6574,181.216

4,085,8923,990,6933,895,6273,800,7033.705,929

3,611,3163,516,8753,422,6193,328,5623,234,725

3,141,1283,047.7972,954,7582,862,0422,769,681

2,677,7092,586.1642,495,0862,404,5192.314,514

Averagenumber of

years of tiferemaining atJeginning ofage interval

(7)

69.8370.5770.8971.08

69.8370.6169.7268.7867.83

66.8865.9164.9563.9763.00

62.0261.0460.0759.095a.11

57.1456.1855.2254.2653.31

52.3651.4150.4649.5248.57

47.6346.6845.7344.7843.84

42.8941.9541.0140.0739.14

38.2037.2736.3535.4334.51

33.6132.7031.8130.9330.05

29.1828.3227.4726.6325.80

5

TAELE 1. LIFE TAELE FOR THE TOTAL POPULATION IN ~’TROPOLITAN AREAS: UNITED STATES, 1959 -61-cOn.

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+f

YEARS

50-51..............51-52 ..............52-53 ..............53-54..............54-55 ..............

55-56 ..............56-57 ..............57-58 ..............58-59..............59-60..............

60-61 ..............61-62 ...............62-63 ..............63-64 ..............64-65 ..............

65-66 ..............66-67 ..............67-68 ..............68-69 ..............69-70..............

70-71 ..............71-72 ..............72-73..............73-74 ..............74-75 ..............

75-76..............76-77 ..............77-78..............78-79 ..............79-80 ..............

80-81..............81-82..............82-83..............83-84..............84-85..............

85-86..............86-87 ..............87-88 ..............88-89 ..............89-90 ..............

90-91 ..............91-92 ...............92-93 ..............93-94 ..............94-95 ..............

95-96 ..............96-97 ..............97-98 ..............98-99 ..............99-100 .............

100-101 ............101-102 ............102-103 ............103-104 ............104-105 ............

105-106 ............106-107 ............107-108............108-109............109-110 ............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

>eginning of~ge interval~ying duringinterval

(2)

t9x

.00799

.00880

.00961

.01040

.01120

.01203

.01295

.01403

.01529

.01673

.01829

.01993

.02165

.02345

.02533

.02733

.02949

.03185

.03443

.03724

.04027

.04354

.04710

.05099

.05526

.05981

.06477

.07046

.07713

.08483

.09394

.10410

.11436

.12373

.13215

.14462

.15827

.17308

.18958

.20763

.22656

.24564

.26461

.28277

.29946

.31416

.32915

.34.450

.36018

.37616

.39242

.40891

.42562

.44250

.45951

.47662

.49378

.51095

.52810

.54519

OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE

Numberliving at

>eginning ofage interval

(3)

lx

89,06388,35187,57386,73285,829

84,86883,84782,76181,60080,352

79,00877,56276,01674,37172,627

70.78768,85266,82164,69362,466

60,14057,71855,20552,60549,923

47,16444*34341,47138,54935,576

32.55829.49926,42923,40620,510

17,80015.22512,81610,5988,589,

6,8055,2643,9712,9202,094

1,4671,006675442283

177107633620

116311

Number dyingduring

age interval

(4)

tdx

712778841903961

1,0211,0661,1611,2481,344

1,4461,5461,6451,7441,840

1,9352,0312,1282.2272,326

2,4222,5132,6002,6822,759

2.8212;8722.9222;9733,018

3,0593,0703,0232,8962.710

2,5752*4092,2182,0091,784

1,5411.2931,051826627

461331233159106

704427169

53

:1

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

88,70787,96287,15286,28185,349

84,35783,30582,18080,97779,680

78,28576,78975,19473,49971,706

69,82067.83765,75763,58061,303

58,92956,46253,90551,26448,543

45,75442,90740,01037,06334,067

31,02827,96524,91721,95819,155

16,51314.02011,7079.5937;697

6,0344,6173,4462,5071,780

1,237841558363230

14285502915

94211

In thisand all

8ubsequentage intervals

(6)

T,

2,225,1282,136,4212,048,659l,961i3071,875,026

1,789,6771,705,3201,622,0151,539,8351,458,858

1,379,1781,300,8931,224,1041,148,9101,075,411

1,003,705933,885866,048800,291736,711

675,408616,479560,017‘506,112454,848

406.305360,551317,644277,634240,571

206,504175,476147,511122,594100,636

81,48164,96850,94s39,24129,648

21,95115,91711,3007,8545,347

3,5672,3301,4s9931568

3381961116132

178421

AVERAGER~ININGLIFET2NR

Averagenumber of

years of liferemaining atbeginning ofage interval

(7)

24.9S24.1823.3922.6121.85

21.0920.3419.6018.8718.16

17.4616.7716.1015.4514.81

14.1813.5612.9612.3711.79

11.2310.6810.149.629.11

8.618.137.667.206.76

6.345.955.585.244.91

4.584.273.983.703.45

3.233.022.852.692.55

2.432.322.212.102.01

1.911.831.751.671.60

1.531.461.401.351.29

6

TAELE 2. LIFE TA8LE FOR THE WHITE MALE POPWTION IN METROPOLITAN AREAS: UNITED STATES; 1959-61

1

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)xtox+t

DAYS

o-1................1-3................3-28...............28-365.............

YEARS

o-1................1-2................2-3................3-4................4-5................

5-6................6-7................7-8................8-9................9-10...............

10-11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11-12..............12-13..............13-14..............14-15..............

15-16..............16-17..............17-18..............18-19.........i....19-20..............

20-21 ..............21-22 ..............22-23 ..............23-24..............24-25 ..............

25-26..............26-27 ..............27-28 ..............28-29..............29-30..............

30-31 ..............31-32 ..............32-33..............33-34..............34-35 ..............

35-36..............36-37 ..............37-38..............38-39..............39-,40..............

40-41 ..............+1-42 ..............42-43 ..............43-44 ..............44-45..............

45-46..............46-47..............47-48;.............48-49 ..............49-50 ..............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

beginning ofage intervaldy~eng

(2)

t9x

0.01081.00500.00370.00588

.025~7

.00140

.00094

.00078

.00065

.00059

.00054

.00050

.00046

.00042

.00038

.00038:00042.00052.00065

.00081

.00095

.00108

.00119

.00127

.00135

.00143

.00147

.00145

.00140

.00133

.00128

.00125

.00127

.00132

.00140

.00148

.00157

.00167

.00179

.00193

.00211

.00232

.00257

.00286

.00320:00358.00401.00449.00503

.00561

.00625

.00699

.00784

.00879

OF 100,000 BOW ALIVR

Numberliving at

>eginning oflge interval

(3)

Ix

100*OOO98,91998,42498,060

100s00097,48397,34697,25597,180

97,11797,06097,00796,95996,915

96.87496,83796,80096,76096,710

96,64796.56996,47796,37296,258

96,13696,00695,86995,72895,589

95,45595,32895.20795,08794,967

94,84194,70894,56894,42094,262

94,093.93,91193,.71393,49693,256

92,98992,69192,35991,98991,57&

91s11590,60390,03789,40888.707

Number dyingduring

3.geinterval

(4)

,dx

1,081495364577

2,517137917563

5753484441

3737405063

7892105114122

130137141139134

127121120120126

13314014e158169

182198217240267

298332370413461

512566629701780

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

272540

6,72390,278

97,81397,41597,30197,21.797,148

97,08897,03496,98396,93796,894

96,85696,e1996*7eo96,73496.678

96,60896,52396,42496,31596,197

96,07295*93795.79895,65995,522

95,39295,26895,14795,02794,904

94,77494,63994,49494,34094,178

94,00293,81293,60593,37693,123

92,84092,52592,17491,78291,346

90. e5990,32089,72289,05888,317

In thisand all

subsequentage intervals

(6)

T,

6,748,2526,747,9806,747,4406,740,717

6,748,2526,650,4396,553,0246,455,7236,358,506

6,261,3586,164,2706,067,2365,970,2535,873,316

5,776.4225,679,5665,582.7475,485,9675,3e9.233

5,292,5555,195.9475,099,4245,003,0004,906,685

4,810,4884,714,4164,618,4794,522,6814,427,022

4,331,5004,236,1084,140, e404,045,6933,950,666

3,855,7623,760,9883.666,3493,571,8553,477,515

3,383,337”3,289,3353,195,5233,101,9183,008,542

2,915,4192,822,5792,730,0542,637,8802,546,098

2,454,7522,363,8932,273,5732,183,8512,094,793

AVERAGERENAININGLIFETW

Averagenumber of

years of liferemaining at>eginning ofage interval

(7)

$,

67.4868.2268.5568.74

67.4e68.2267.3266.3865.43

64.4763.5162.5461.5860.60

59.6358.6557.6756.7055.73

54.7653.8152.8651.9150.97

50.0449.1148.1747.2546.31

45.3844.4443.4942.5541.60

40.6639.7138.7737.8336.89

35.9635.0334.1033.1832.26

31.3530.4529.5628.6827.80

26.9426.o925.2524.4323.61

7

TABLE 2. LIFE TABLE FOR THE WHITE NALE POPULATION IN METROPOLITAN AREAS: UNITE$ STATES, 1959-61-con.

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

xtex+t

YEARS

50-51 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51-52 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52-53 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53-54 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54-55 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

55-56 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56-57 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .57-58 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58-59 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59-60 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

60-61 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61-62 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62-63 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63-64 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64-65 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

65-66 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66-67 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .67-68 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .68-69 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69-70 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

lo-n . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71-72 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72-73 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73-74 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74-75 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

75-76 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76-77 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .77-78 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .78-79 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .79-80 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

80-81 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .81-82 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82-83 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83-84 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .84-85 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

85-86 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .86-87 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .87-88 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88-89 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .89-90 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

90-91 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .91-92 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92-93 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93-94 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9+-95 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

95-96 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .96-97 . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .97-98 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .98-99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .99-100 . . . . . . . . . . . . .

100-101 ............101-102 ............102-103............103-104 ............104-105 ............

105-106 . . . . . . . . . . . .106-107 . . . . . . . . . . . .107-108 . . . . . . . . . . . .108-109 . . . . . . . . . . . .109-110 . . . . . . . . . . . .

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

beginning ofage intervalay~:in~ng

(2)

.00983

.01092

.01202

.01310

.01419

.01532

.01657

.01801

.01972

.02165

.02372

.02589

.02817

.03055

.03304

.03570

.03853

.04150

.04462

.04791

.05141

.05518

.05924

.06365

.06845

.07361

.07922

.08551

.09270

.10085

.11051

.12144

.13255

.14271

.15163

.16217

.17338

.18575

.20036

.21712

.23463

.25183

.26902

.28563

.30093

.31416

.32915

.34450

.36018

.376L6

.39242

.40891

.42562

.44250

.45951

.47662

.49378

.51095

.52810

.54519

OF 100,000

Numberliving at

jeginning of!ge interval

(3)

lx

87,92787,06386,11285,07783,963

82,77181,50380,15278,70977,157

75,48773,69671,78869,76667,634

65,39963,06560,63558,11955,526

52.86650,14847,38144,57441,736

38.87936,01733,16430,32827,517

24,742.22.00819,33516,77214,379

12,19910,2208,4486,8795,501

4,3063,2962,4661,8031,288

900617414271174

10866392212

742

i

)RN ALIVE

~umber dyingduring

Ige interval

(4)

,dx

86’4951

1,0351,1141,192

1,2681,3511,4431,5521,670

1.7911.9082,0222,1322,235

2,3342.4302,5162,5932,660

2,7182,7672,8072,8382,857

2,8622,8532,8362,8112,775

2,7342.6732,5632.393

1,9791,7721,5691,3781,195

1,010830663515388

2832031439766

422717105

32110

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

~Lx

87,49586,58885,59484,52083,367

82,13780,82879,43077,93376,322

74,59172,742.70,77668,70066,517

64,23361,85059,37756,82254,196

51,50748.76445,97843,15540,308

37,44834,591.31,74628,92326,129

23,37520,67218,05315,57613,289

11,2099,3347,6646,1904,903

3,8012,8812,1351,5451,094

758516343223141

8752311710

52201

In thisand all

subsequentLge intervals

2,006,4761,918,9811,S32,3931,746,7991,662,279

1,578,9121,496,7751,415,9471,336,5171,258,584

1,182,2621,107,6711,034,929

964,153895,453

82S,936764,703702,853643,476586,654

532,45s4s0,951432,1S7386,209343,054

302,746265,29S230,707198,961170,038

143,909120,53499,86281,80966,233

52,94441,73532,40124,73718,547

13,6449,8436,9624,8273,282

2,1881,430914571348

2071206S3720

105311

AVERAGERF,NAININGLIFET2NE

Averagenumber of

{ears of liferemaining at>eginning oflge interval

(7)

8X

22.8222.0421.2820.5319.80

19.0818.3617.6716.9816.31

15.6615.0314.4Z13.8213.24

12.6712.1311.5911.0710.57

10.079.599.128.668.22

7.797.376.966.566.18

5.825.485.164.884.61

4.344.083.a43.603.37

3.172.992.822.682.55

2.432.322.212.102.01

1.911.831.751.671.60

1.531.461.401.351.29

8

a TABLE 3. LIFE TARLE FOR THE NRITE FEMALE POPULATION IN METROPOLITAN AWS: UNITED STATES, 1959-61

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+t

DAYS

o-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-3................3-28...............28-365 .............

YEARS

o-1................1-2.................2-3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3-4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4-5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

5-6................6-7................7-e................8-9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9-10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

10-11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11-12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12-13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13-14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14-15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

15-16 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16-17 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17-18 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18-19 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19-20 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

20-21 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21-22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22-23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23-24 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24-25 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

25-26..............26-27 ..............27-28..............28-29 ..............29-30 ..............

30-31 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31-32 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32-33 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33-34 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34-35 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

35-36 ..............36-37 ..............37-38 ..............38-39..............39-40..............

40-41 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41-42 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42-43 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43-44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44-45 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

45-46 ..............46-47 ..............47-48 ..............48-49 ..............49-50 ..............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

beginning ofage intervaldying during

interval

(2)

Iqx

0.00836.00349.00276.00462

.01911

.00120

.00076

.00059.00053

.00045

.00039

.00035.00031.00028

.00027

.00026

.00027

.00029

.00033

.00038

.00042

.00046

.0004e

.00050

.00051

.00054

.00056

.00058

.00060

.00062

.00064

.0006e

.00072

.00078

.00084

.00091

.00098

.00105

.00113

.00121

.00132

.00144

.00159

.00176

.00195

.00215

.00238

.00262

.00288

.00316

.00347

.00379

.00415

.00453

OF 100,000 BOM ALIVE

Numberliving at

>eginning of~ge interval

(3)

lx

100,00099,16498,81898,545

100*OOO98,08997.97197,89797,839

97,78897,74397,70597,67197,641

97,61397,58797,56197,53597,506

97,47497,43797,39697,35297.305

97,25697,20697.15497*loo97,044

96,98696,92696,86496,79896,728

96,65396,57296,48596,39096,289

96,18196,06495,93895,79995,647

95,47995,29395,08894,86194,613

94.34094.04293,71693,36o92,973

!umber dyingduring

age interval

(4)

, dx

836346273456

1,911118

745851

4538343028

2626262932

3741444749

5052545658

6062667075

818795101108

117126139152168

186205227248273

298326356387421

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

273542

6,75390,781

98,34998,03197,93497,86897,813

97,76597,72597,6e7

r 97,65697,627

97,60097,57497,54897,52097,490

97,45697,41797*37497,32e97,281

97,23197,18097.12797,07297,015

96,95696,89596*e3196,76496,690

96,61396,52896,43896.34096,235

96,12296,00195,86995,72395,563

95,38695,19194,97494,73794,477

94,19193.87S93,53893,16792,762

In thisand all

subsequentage intervals

(6)

T,

7,398,7767,398,5037,397,9617,391,208

7,398,7767,300,4277,202.3967,104,4627,006,594

6,908,7816,811,0166,713,2916,615,6046,517,948

6,420,3216,322,7216,225.1476,127,5996,030,079

5,932,5895,835,1335,737,7165,640,3425,543,014

5,445,7335,348,5025,251,3225,154,1955,057,123

4,960,1084,863,1524,766,2574,669,4264,572,662

4,475,9724,379,3594,282, e314,1”86,3934,090,053

3,993,8183,897,6963,801,6953,70 S,8263,610,103

3,514,5403,419,1543,323,9633,228,9893,134,252

3,039,7752,94S,5842,851,7062,758,1682,665,001

AVEMGERENAININGLIFETINE

Averagenumber of

fears of liferemaining at>eginning ofIge interval

(7)

73.9914.6174.8675.00

73.9974.4373.5272.5771.61

70.6569.6868.7167.7366.75

65.7764.7963.8162.8261.84

60.8659.8958.9157.9456.97

55.9955.0254.0553.0852.11

51.1450.1749.2148.2447.27

46.3145.3544.3943.4342.48

41.5240.5739.6338.6837.74

36.8135.8834.9634.0433.13

32.2231.3230.4329.5428.66

0 9

TABLE 3. L2FE TABLE FOR THE NHITE FENALE POPULATION IN METROPOLITAN ARP,AS: DNITFD STATES, 1959-61-Con.

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+t

YEARS

50-51 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51-52 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52-53 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53-54 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54-55 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

55-56 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56-57 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .57-58 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58-59 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59-60 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

60-61 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61-62 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62-63 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63-64 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

64-65 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

65-66 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66-67 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .67-68 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .68-69 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69-70 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

70-71 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71-72 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72-73 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73-74 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74-75 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

75-76 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76-77 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .77-78 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .78-79 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .79-80 . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

80-81 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .81-82 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82-83 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83-84 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .84-85 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

85-86 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .86-87 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .87-88 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88-89 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .89-90 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

90-91 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .91-92 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92-93 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93-94 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94-95 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

95-96 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .96-97 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .97-98 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .98-99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .99-100 . . . . . . . . . . . . .

100-101 ............101-102 ............102-103 ............103-104 ............104-105 ............

105-106 ............106-107 ............107-108 ............108-109 ............109-110 ............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

)eginning of]ge intervallying duringinterval

(2)

tqx

.00495

.00541

.00585

.00628

.00671

.00717

.00772

.00840

.00926

.01027

.01140

.01261

.01390

.01524

.01668

.01823

.01996

.02193

.02420

.02677

.02956

.03259

.03600

.03990

.04428

.04898

.05407

.05993

.06677

.07462

.08381

.09400

.10432

.11392

.12287

.13714

.15275

.16933

.18709

.20591

.22551

.24538

.26492

.28333

.29994

.31416

.32915

.34450

.36018

.37616

.39242

.40891

.42562

.44250

.45951

.47662

.49378

.51095

.52810

.54519

OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE

Numberliving at

>eginning of~ge interval

(3)

lx

92,55292,09491,59691,06090,488

89.88189,23688,54787,80386,990

86,09785,11584,04182,87381,610

80.24978,78677,21375,52073,693

71.72069,5996T,33164,90762,318

59.55856,64153,57950,36847,004

43,49739.85236,10632,33928,655

25,1342L,68718,37515,26312,408

9,8537,6315,7584,2333,034

2,1241,456

977640410

256155

925329

168421

lumber dyingduring

[ge interval

[4)

, dx

458498536572607

645689744813893

9821,0741s1681,2631,361

1,4631,5731,6931,8271,973

2,1212,2682,4242,5892,760

2,9173.0623,2113,3643,507

“3,6453,7463,7673,6843,521

3,4473,3123.1122,8552,555

2,2221,8731,5251,199

910

668479337230154

10163392413

84211

STATIONARY POPWTION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

92,32391, a4591,32890,77490,184

89,55888,89288,17487,39786,543

85,60684,57883;45782,24280,929

79,51778,00076,36674,60772,706

70,65968,46666,11963,61360,938

58,09955.11051,97348.68645,251

41,67437.97934,22230,49726,895

23,41020,03116,81913,83511,131

8,7416,6954,9953,6342,578

1,7901,217

809525333

205124724123

126320

In thisand all

subsequentLge intervals

2,572,2392,479,9162,388,0712,296,7432,205,969

2,115,7852,026,2271,937,3351,849,1611,761,764

1,675,2211,589,6151,505,0371,421,5801,339,338

1,258,4091,178,8921,100,8921,024,526

949,919

877,213806,554738,088671,969608,356

547,418489,319434,209382,236333,550

288,299246,625208,646174,424143.927

117,03293,62273.59156,77242,937

31,80623,06516.37011,3757,741

5,1633,3732,1561,347

822

4892841608847

2412631

AVRRAGER~ININGLIFETIM2

Averagenumber of

years of liferemaining at>egfnning ofage interval

(7)

27.7926.9326.0725.2224.38

23.5422.7121.8821.0620.25

19.4618.6817.9117.1516.41

15.6814.9614.2613.5712.89

12.2311.5910.9610.359.76

9.198.648.107.597.10

6.636.195.785.395.02

4.664.324.013.723.46

3.233.022.842.692.55

2.432.322.212.102.01

1.911.831.751.671.60

1.531.461.401.351.29

10

TABLE 4. LIFE TABLE FOR THE NONNHITE MALE POPULATION IN METROPOLITAN ARRAS: UNITED STATES, 1959-61

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two agea

(1)

Xtox+f

DAYS

o-1................1-3................3-28...............2a-365 .............

YEARS

o-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-2................2-3................3-4................4-5................

5-6................6-7................7-8................8-9................9-10...............

10-11..............11-12..............12-13 ..............13-14..............14-15..............

15-16..............16-17..............17-18..............18-19..............19-20..............

20-21 ..............21-22..............22-23 ..............23-24..............24-25..............

25-26..............26-27 ..............27-28..............28-29..............29-30 ..............

30-31...............31-32 ..............32-33..............33-34 ..............34-35 ..............

35-36 ..............36-37 ..............37-38..............38-39 ..............39-40 ..............

40:41 ..............41-42 ..............42-43 ..............43-44 ..............44-45 ..............

45-46..............46-47 ..............47-48 ..............48-49 ..............49-50 ...............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

)eginning ofLge interval~ying duringinterval

(2)

IQX

0.01715.00682.00645.01353

.04327

.00283

.00179

.00122

.00092

.00081

.00073

.00067

.00061

.00057

.00055

.00056

.00062

.00074

.00090

.00108

.00127

.00147

.00166

.00185

.00205

.00226

.00243

.00256

.00266

.00275

.00287

.00301

.00318

.00339

.00361

.00386

.00411

.00438

.00467

.00498

.00532

.00573

.00620

.00673

.00733

.00796

.00859

.00920

.00983

.01047

.01119

.01210

.01325

.01460

I

OF 100,000 BORN ALIVR

Numberliving at

>eginning ofIge interval

(3)

lx

100,00098,28597,61596,986

100*OOO95,67395,40395,23195,115

95,02894,95194,88194,81894,760

94,70694,65494,60194,54394,473

94,38894,28694,16694,02893,872

93,69893.50693,29593,06992,831

92,58492,32992,06491,78791,495

91,18590,85690,50590,13389,739

89,32088.87588,40287,89687,351

86,763e6,L2885,44284,70883,929

83,10482,23481,31480,33079,266

lumber dyingduring

~ge interval

(4)

,d=

1,715670629

1,313

4.32727017211687

7770635854

5253587085

102120138156174

192211226238247

255265277292310

329351372394419

445473506545588

635686734779825

870920984

1,0641,158

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

272536

6,65888,947

96,41395,53895.31795;17395,071

94,98994,91694,85094,78994,733

94,68094,62894,57294,50794,431

94,33794,22694,09793,95093,785

93,60293.40193,18292,95092,707

92,45692,19691,92691,64191,340

91,02190,68190,31989,93689,529

89,09788,63988,14987,62387,057

86,44585,78585,07684,31883,517

82s66981,77480,82279,79878,686

In thisand all

subsequent~ge intervals

(6)

6,179,0566,178,7846,178,2486,171,590

6,179,0566,082,6435,987,1055,891,7885,796,615

5,701.5445,606,5555,511,6395,416,7895,322,000

5,227,2675,132.5875,037,9594,943,3874,848,880

4,754,4494,660,1124,565,8864,471,7894,377,839

4,284,0544,190,4524,097,0514,003,8693,910,919

3.818,2123.725,7563;633;5603,541,6343,449,993

3,358,6533,267,6323,176,9513,086,6322,996,696

2,907,1672,818,0702,729,4312,641,2822,553,659

2,46b,6022,380,1572,294,3722,209,2962,124,978

Z?041j4611,958,7921,877,0181,796,1961,716,398

AVERAGERENAININGLIFETIKS

Averagenumber of

years of Nferemaining at>eginning ofage interval

(7)

61.7962.8763.2963.63

61.7963.5862.76 -61.8760.94

60.0059.0558.0957.1356.1,6

55.1954.2253.2552.2951.33

50.3749.4348.4947.5646.64

45.7244.8143.9143.0242.13

41.2440.3539.4738.5937.71

36.8335.9735.1034.2533.39

32.5531.7130.8830.0529.23

28.4327.6426.8526.0825.32

2+.5723.8223.0822.3621.65

11

TABLE 4. LIFE TARLE FOR TRE NONWHITE MALE POPULATION IN METROPOLITAN A~S: UNITED STATES, 1959-61-Con.

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+f

YEARS

50-51 ..............51-52 ..............52-53 ..............53-54 ..............54-55 ..............

55-56 ..............56-57...............57-58..............58-59 ..............59-60 ..............

60-61 ..............61-62 ..............62-63 ..............63-64 ..............64-65 ..............

65-66 ..............66-67..............67-68 ..............68-69 ..............69-70 ..............

70-71 ..............71-72 ..............72-73 ..............73-74 ..............74-75 ..............

75-76 ..............76-77..............77-78 ..............78-79 ..............79-80 ..............

80-81 ..............81-82 ..............82-83 ..............83-84 ..............84-85 ..............

85-86 ..............86-87 ..............87-88 ..............88-89 ..............89-90 ..............

90-91..............91-92..............92-93 ..............93-94 ..............94-95 ..............

95-96 ..............96-97 ..............97-98 ..............98-99 ..............99-100 .............

100-101 ............101-102 ............102-103............103-104............104-105 ............

105-106............106-107 ............107-108 ............108-109 ............109-110 ............

12

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

>eginning ofage intervaliying duringinterval

(2)

19X

.01608

.01759

.01907

.02047

.02182

.02322

.02474

.02636

.02811

.03000

.03193

.03396

.03628

.03899

.04203

.04539

.048.83

.05204

.05475

.05703

.05927

.06165

.06385

.06582

.06762

.06895

.07026

.07264

.07695

.08313

.09105

.09964

.10772

.11369

.11735

.12559

.13541

.14745

.16283

.18127

.20143

.22250

.24482

.26796

.29137

.31416

.32915

.34450

.36018

.37616

.39242

.40891

.42562

.44250

.45951

.47662

.49378

.51095

.52810

.54519

OF 100,000BORN ALIVS

Numberliving at

beginning ofage interval

(3)

I,

78,10876,85275,50074,06072,544

70,96169,31467,59965,81763,967

62,04860,06758,02755,92253,742

5L,48349,14646,74644,31441,888

39,49937,15834,86732,6+130,492

28.43026,47024,61022,82321,067

19,31517,55715,80714,10512,501

11.0349,6488,3427,1125,954

4,8743,8933,0272,2861,673

1,186813545358229

14387512916

952L

iumber dyingduring

Ige interval

(4)

, dx

1,2561,3521,4401,5161,583

1.6471,7151,7821;8501,919

1.9812,0402,1052,1802,259

2*3372,4002,4322,4262,389

2,3412,2912,2262*1492,062

1.9601,8601,7871,7561,752

1.7581;7501,7021,6041,467

1,3861,3061,2301,1581,080

981866741613487

37326818712986

563622137

43101

STATIONARY POPUTION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

77,48076,17674,78073,30271,753

70,13868,45666,70964,89263,008

61,05759,04856,97454,83352,612

50,31547,94645,53043,10140,693

38,32836,01233,75431,56629,462

27,45025,54023,71721,94420,191

18,43616,68214,95613,30311,768

10,3418,9957,7276,5335,414

4,3833,4602,6561,9791,430

999679452293186

11569402312

74!.L1

In thisand all

subsequentsge interva18

(6)

T,

1,637,7121,560,2321,484,0561,409,2761,335,974

1,264,2211,194,0831,125,6271,058,918

994,026

931,018869,961810,913753,939699,106

646,494596,L79548,233502,703459,602

418,909380,581344,569310,815279,249

249,787222,337196,797173.080151,136

130,945112,50995,82780,87167,568

55,80045,45936,46428.73722,204

16,79012,4078,9476,2914,312

2,8821s8831,204752459

273158894926

147321

AV2RAGEREMAININGLIFET2MS

Averagenumber of

years of liferemaining atbeginning ofage interval

(7)

a,

20.9720.3019.6619.0318.42

17.8217.2316.6516.0915.54

15.0014.4813.9713.4813.01

12.5612.1311.7311.3410.97

10.6110.249.889.529.16

8.798.408.007.587.17

6.786.416.065.735.40

5.064.714.374.043.73

3.443.192.962.752.58

2.432.322.212.102-01

1.911.831.751.671.60

1.531.461.401.351.29

I

ITABLE 5. LIFE TABLE FOR THE NONNHITE FEMALE POPULATION IN METROPOLITAN AREAS: UNITED STATES, 1959-61

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)Xtox+t

DAYS

o-1................1-3................3-28 ...............28-365 .............

YEARS

o-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2-3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3-4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4-5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

5-6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6-7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7-8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8-9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9-10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

10-11..............11-12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12-13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13-14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14-15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

15-16..............16-17..............17-18..............1s-19..............19-20..............

20-21 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21-22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22-23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23-24 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24-25 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

25-26..............26-27..............27-28..............28-29 ..............29-30 ..............

30-31 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31-32 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32-33 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33-34 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34-35 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

35-36 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36-37 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37-38 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38-39 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39-40 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

40-41 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41-42 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42-43 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43-44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44-45 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

45-46 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46-47 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47-48 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48-49 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49-50 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

beginning ofage intervaldying during

interval

(7-)

0.01390.00525

.00527

.01150

.03548

.00235

.00130

.00096

.00083

.00069

.00058

.00049

.00042

.00037

.00034

.00034

.00036

.00041

.0004e

.00057

.00067

.00077

.00085

.00094

.00103

.00113

.00124

.00134

.00146

.00157

.00170

.00185

.00202

.00221

.00242

.00265

.00287

.00309

.00331

.00354

.00379

.00411

.00451

.oo49e

.00550

.00603

.00652

.00695

.00734

.00773

.00820

.ooe82

.00965

.01066

OF 100,000 BORN ALIVR

Numberliving at

>eginning ofage interval

(3)

I=

100,00098,61098,09297,574

100,00096,45296,22596,10096,007

95,92895,86295,80695,76095,719

95,68495.65195,61995,58495,545

95,49995,44595,38195,30895,227

95,13795,04094,93294,81594,687

94,54994,40194,24094,06593,875

93,66793*44193,19392,92692,639

92,33392,00791,65791,28090.868

90,41689,91989,37788,79488,177

87,53086,854e6,14285,38284,558

Number dyingduring

age interval

(4)

, d,

1,390518518

1,122

3,548227125

9379

6656464135

3332353946

5464738190

97108117128138

148”161175190208

22624a267287306

326350377412452

497542583617647

676712760824901

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

‘(LX ,

272538

6,69589,578

97,08396,33896,16296,0549s, 968

95,89595,83495.78395,73995,702

95,66795.63595,60195,56595,522

95,47295,41395,34595,26795,182

95,08994,98694,87394,75194,618

94,47594,32194,15293,97093,772

93,55493,3L793,05992,78392,486

92,17091,83291,46991,07490,642

90,16889,64e89,08688,48587,854

87,19186,49885.76284,97084,107

In thisand all

subsequentage intervals

(6)

Tx

6,672,5246,672,2526,671,7146,665,019

6,672,5246,575.4416,479,1036,382,9416,286, e87

6,190,9196,095,0245,999,1905,903,4075,807,668

5,711,9665.616.2995.520,6645,425,0635,329,498

5,233,9765.138,5045.043.0914,947,7464,852.479

4,757,2974,662.20e4,567,2224.472,3494,377,598

4,282,9804,188,5054,094.1844,000,0323,906,062

3,812,2903,718,7363,625,4193,532,3603,439,577

3,347,0913,254,9213,163,0893,071,6202,980,546

2.889,9042,799,7362,710,0882.621,0022,532,517

2,444,6632.357,4722,270,9742,185,2122,100,242

AVERAGERENAININGLIFETINR

Averagenumber of

years of liferemaining at>eginning ofage interval

(7)0

ex

66.7367.6668.0268.31

66.7368.1767.3366.4265.48

64.5463.5862.6261.6560.67

59.7058.7257.7456.7655.78

54.81.53.8452.8751.9150.96

50.0049.0648.1147.1746.23

45.3044.3743.4442.5241.61

40.7039.eo38.9038.0137.13

36.2535.3s34.5133.6532.80

31.9631.1430.3229.5228.72

27.9327.1426.3625.5924.84

. 13

TABLE 5. LIFE TABLE FOR T~ NONNRITE F~E POPULATION IN METROPOLITAN AREAS: UNITED STATES, 1959-61-Con.

AGE INTERVAL

,Periodof lifebetweentwo ages

(1)

Xtox+t

YEARS

50-51 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51-52 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52-53 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53-54 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

54-55 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

55-56 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56-57 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .57-58 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58-59 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59-60 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

60-61 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61-62 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62-63 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63-64 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64-65 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

65-66 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66-67 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .67-68 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .68-69 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69-70 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

70-71 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71-7z . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72-73 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73-74. . . . . . . . . . . . . .74-75 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

75-76 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .76-77 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .77-78 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .78-79 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .79-80 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

80-81 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .81-82 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82-83 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83-84 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .84-85 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

85-86 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .86-87 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .87-88 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88-89 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .89-90 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

90-91 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .91-92 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92-93 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93-94 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94-95 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

95-96 ..............96-97 ..............97-98 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .98-99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .99-100 . . . . . . . . . . . . .

100-101 ............101-102............102-103 ............103-104 ............104-105 ............

105-106 . . . . . . . . . . . .106-107 . . . . . . . . . . . .107-108 . . . . . . . . . . . .108-109 . . . . . . . . . . . .109-110 . . . . . . . . . . . .

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

beginning ofage intervaldy~:eing

(2)

t’?x

.01175

.01286

.01400

.01513

.01627

.01744

.01868

.02001

.02147

.02303

.02473

.02644

.02800

.02929

.03040

.03137

.03247

.03399

.03618

.03892

.O4Z1O

.04532.04817.05030.05186

.05301

.05443

.05679

.06078

.06624

.07292

.07992

.08644

.09140

.09483

.10569

.11831

.13290.15004.16955

.19049

.21272

.23686

.26259

.28888

.31416

.32915

.34450

.36018

.37616

.39242

.40891

.42562

.44250

.45951

.47662

.49378

.51095

.52810

.54519

OF 100,000BORN ALIVR

Numberliving at

)eginning of~ge interval

(3)

lx

83,65782.67481,61180,468

79,251

77,96176,60275,17173,66772,085

70,42568,68466*86864,99563,092

61.17459.25557;33155,38353,379

51,30149,14246,91544,65542,408

40,20938,07836,00533.96031,896

29,78427,61225,40523.20921,088

19,08817.07115,05113,05111,093

9,2127,4575,8714,4803,304

2,3491,6111,081709453

283172102

5833

189521

Yumber dyingduring

Ige interva~

[4)

~dx

9831,0631,1431,217

1,290

1,3591,4311,5041,5821,660

1*7411,8161,8731,9031,918

1,9191,9241,9482,0042,078

2,1592,2272,2602,2472,199

2,1312,0732*0452.0642,112

2,1722,2072,1962,1212* 000

2,0172.0202;0001,9581,881

1,7551,5861.3911,176

955

738530372256170

11170442515

94311

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

83,16582,14381*03979,860

78,606

77,28275,88674,41972,87671,255

69,55467,77665,93164,04462,133

60,21458,29456,35754,38052,340

50, ZZ248,02845,78543.53141,309

39,14337,04234,9833Z,92830,840

28,69826,508Z4, 30722,14920,088

18,07916,06114.05112,07210,152

8,3356,6645,1763,8922,826

1,9811,346895581368

227137804525

In thisand all

8ubsequentage intervals

.,Tx

2.016,1351.932,9701;850;8271,769,7881,689,928

1,611,3221,534,0401,458,1541,383,7351,310,859

1,239,6041,170,0501,102,2741,036,343

972,299

910,166849,952791,658735,301680,921

628,581578.359530,331484,546441,015

399,706360,563323,521288,538Z55,61O

224,770196,072169,564145,2571Z3,108

103,02084,94168,88054,82942,757

32,60524,27017,60612.4308,538

5,7123,7312,3851,490909

5413141779752

2713731

AVERAGERWININGLIFETIME

Averagenumber of

$earsof lifecem8iningac>eginningofIge interval

Z4.1023.3822.6821.9921.3Z

20.6720.0319.4018.7818.18

17.6017.0416.4015.9415.41

14.8814.3413.8113. Z812.76

12.2511.7711.3010.8510.40

9.949.478.998.508.01

7.557.106.676.265.84

5.404.984.584’203.85

3.543.Z53.002.772.58

2.43Z.32Z.212.102.01

1.911.831.751.671.60

1.531.461.401.351.Z9

14

TA8LE 6. LIFE TABLE FOR THE TOTAL POPULATIONIN NONNP,TROPOLITANAWS: UNITED STATES,“1959-61

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtex+t

DAYs

o-1................1-3................3-28...............28-365.............

YEARS

o-1................1-2................2-3................3-4................4-5................

5-6................6-7................7-8................8-9................9-10...............

10-11..............11-12..............12-13..............13-14..............14-15..............

15-16..............16-17..............17-18..............18-19...............19-20..............

20-21 ..............21-22..............22-23..............23-24..............24-25 ..............

25-26..............26-27..............27-28 ..............20-29 ..............29-30..............

30-31..............31-32..............32-33..............33-34 ..............34-35..............

35-36 ..............36-37 ..............37-38..............38-39 ..............39-4Q..............

40-41 ..............41-42 ..............42-43 ..............43-44 ..............44-45 ..............

45-46 ..............46-47..............47-48 .........’.....48-49..............49-50 ..............

P~aporELonof personsalive at

beg~n~ing ofage intervaldy:ng duringinterval

(2)

19X

0.00986.00458.00457.00895

.02767

.00204

.00120

.00089

.00074

.00064

.00057

.00052

.00047

.00044

.00042

.00042;00047.00056.00069

.00083

.00097

.00110

.00122

.00132

.00142

.00152

.00159

.00159

.00156

.00152

.00149

.00148

.00149

.00153

.00158

.00164

.00172

.00181

.00193

.00207

.00222

.00239

.00259

.00260

.00304

.00330

.00359

.00389

.00422

.00457

.00497

.00543

.00598

.00660

OF 100,000 BO~ ALIVR

Numberlivipg at

]eginning oflge interval

(3)

:x

100,00099,01498.56198,111

100,00097,23397,03596,91896,833

96,76196,69996,64396,59396,547

96,50596,46596,42496,37996,325

96,25996,17996,08695,98095,863

95,73795,60095,45595,30395,151

95,00394,85894,71694,57694*435

94,29094*14193,98693,82593,655

93,47493,28193,07492,85192,611

92,35292,07191,76791,43891,081

90,69790,28289,83389,34688,812

~umber dyingduring

ige in~e~val

(4)

, dx

986453450878

2,7671981178572

6256504642

4041455466

8093106117126

137145152152148

145142140141145

149155161170181

193207223240259

281304329357384

415449487534587

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

272541

6,72990,186

97,72897,13496.97696,87696,797

96.72996,67196,61896,57196,526

96,48596,44596,40296,35296,292

96,21996,13296,03395,92295,800

95,66895,52795,37995,22895,077

94,93094,78794,64694,50694,362

94,21694,06393,90593,74093,565

93,37793,17892,96292,73192,481

92,21291,91991,60291,26090,889

90,48990,05889,58989,07988,518

In thisand all

subsequentege intervals

(6)

6,997,5686,997,2966,996,7556,990,026

6.997,5686,899,8406,802,7066,705,7306,608,854

6,512,0576,415,3286,318,6576,222,0396,125,468

6,028,942.5,932,+575,836.0125,739,6105,643,258

5,546,9665,450,7475,354.6155,258,5825,162,660

5,066,8604,971,1924,875,6654,780,2864,685,058

4,589,9814.495,0514,400,2644,305,6184,211,112

+,116,7504,022,5343,928,4713,834,5663,740,826

3,647,2613,553,8843,460,7063,367,7443,275,013

3,182,5323,090.3202,998,4012,906.7992,815,539

2,724,6502,634,1612,544,1032,454,5142,365,435

AVERAGERENAININGLIFETIME

Averagenumber of

Tears of lifecemaining at>eginning of~ge interval

(7)

8X

69.98.70.6770.9971.25

69.9870.9670.1169.1968.25

67.3066.3465.3864.4163.45

62.4761.5060.5259.5558.59

57.6356.67‘55.7354.7953.85

52.9252.0051.0850.1649.24

48.3147.3946.4645.5344.59

43.6642.7341.8040.8739.94

39.0238.1037.1836.2735.36

34.4633.5632.6731.7930.91

30.0429.1828.3227.4726.63

15

TABLE 6. .LIFE TABLE FOR TH2?TOTAL POPULATION IN NONMETROPOLITAN ARFAS: UNITED STATES, 1959-61-Con,

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+t

YEARS

50-51 ..............51-52 ..............52-53..............53-54..............54-55 ..............

55-56 ..............56-57 ..............57-58 ..............58-59 ..............59-60 ..............

60-61 ..............61-62 ......s.......62-63..............63-64..............64-65 ..............

65-66 ..............66-67 ..............67-68 ..............68-69 ..............69-70 ..............

70-71..............71-72 ..............72-73 ..............73-74...............74-75..............

75-76 ..............76-77..............77-78 ..............78-79 ..............79-80..............

80-81 ..............81-82 ..............82-83 ..............83-84 ..............84-85..............

85-86..............86-87..............87-88 ..............88-89..............89-90..............

90-91 ..............91-92 ..............92-93 ..............93-94 ..............94-95 ..............

95-96..............96-97..............97-98 ..............98-99..............99-100 .............

loo-lol............101-102 ............102-103 ............103-104 ............104-105............

105-106............106-107............107-108 ............108-109 ............109-110 ............

ProportionDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

3eginning ofIge intervaliying duringinterval

(2)

tqx

.00729

.00801

.00873

.00942

.01013

.01086

.01167

.01262

.01374

.0150”1

.01638

.01783

.01935

.02093

.02260

.02437

.02630

.02842

.03077

.03337

.03616

.03918

.04257

.04642

.05073

.05538

.06044

.06622

.07293

.08060

.08961

.09966

.10993

.11963

.12877

.14275

.15802

.17415

.19128

.20929

.22779

.24643

.26498

.28294

.29960

.31416

.32915

.34450

.36018

.37616

.39242

.40891

.42562

.44250

.45951

.47662

.49378

.51095

.52810

.54519

OF 100,000 BORN ALIVR

Numberliving at

beginning ofage interval

(3)

1,

88,22587,58286,881e6,12385,311

84,44783,53182,555S1.51380.393

79,18777.09076,50175,02073,449

71.79070,04068,19866,26064,221

62,07859,83357,4s955,04252,4S7

49,82447,06444.22041,29238,2sl

35,19532.04128.84825,67622,605

19,69416,88314,21511,7399,494

7,5075,7974,3683,2112,302

1,6131,106742486311

19411s704022

126321

Jumber dyingduring

lge interval

(4)

,d,

643701758812S64

916976

1,0421,1201,206

1,2971,3891,4811,5711;659

1,7501,8421,9382,0392.143

2,2452,3442,4472,5552,663

2,7602,8442,9283,0113.086

3,1543,1933,1723,0712,911

2,8112,6682,4762,2451,987

1,7101,4291,157909689

507364256175117

764s301s10

63111

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5),Lx

S7,90487,23286,50185,71884,879

83.98983,04382,03480,95479,790

78,53877,19575,76074,23572,620

70,91569,11967,22965.24063.150

60,95558,66156,26653.76451,155

48,44445,64242,75639,78736,737

33,61930,44427,26224,14121,149

18,28S15,54912,97710,6178,500

6,6525,0833,7902,7561,958

1,359924614399252

15694553118

95211

In thisand all

subsequentage inServals

(6)

Tx

2,276,9112,189,01?2,101,7812,015.28C1,929,56:

1,844,68?1,760,6941,677,6511.595,6111,514,66?

1,434,87?1,356,3351,279,14C1.203,38C1,129,14!

1,056,52:985,61C916,491849,262784.022

720,872659.917601,256544,990491.226

440,071391,627345,985303,22q263,442

226,705193,086162,642135,380111,239

90,09071,80256,25343,27632,659

24,15917,50712,4248,6345,878

3,9202,5611,6371,023624

3722161226736

l’89421

Averagenumber of

years of liferemaining atbeginning ofage interval

(7)

25.8124.9924.19Z3.4022.62

21.8421.0820.3219.5718.S4

18.1217.4116.7216.0415.37

14.7214.0713.4412.8212.21

11.6111.0310.469.909.36

8.838.327.827.346.88

6.446.035.645.274.92

4.574.253.963.693.44

3.223.022.842.692.55

Z.43Z.3Z2.212.102.01

1.911.831.751.671.60

1.531.461.401.351.29

16

TABLE 7. LIFE TABLE FOR TRE WRITE MALE POPUTION IN NONNETROPOLITAN AREAS: UNITED STATES, 1959-61

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+t

DAYS

o-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-3..................3-28...............28-365 .............

YEARS

o-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-2 . . . . . ..’ . . . . . . . . .2-3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3-4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4-5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

5-6................6-7................7-8................8-9................9-10 ...............

10-11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11-12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12-13 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13-14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14-15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

15-16..............16-17..............17-18 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18-19 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19-20 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

20-21 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21-22 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22-23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23-24 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24-25 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

25-26 ..............26-27 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27-28 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28-29 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29-30 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

30-31 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31-32 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32-33 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33-34 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34-35 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

35-36..............36-37 ..............37-38..............38-39..............39-40 ..............

40-41 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41-42 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42-43 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43-44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44-45 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

45-46 ..............46-47 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .47-48 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4a-49 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49-50 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

beginning ofage intervaldying duringinterval

(2)

19X

0.01074.00524.00430.00721

.02722

.00176

.00114

.00087

.00076

.00068

.00062

.00058

.00053

.00049

.00047

.0004e

.00055.00069.00089

.00111

.00132

.00151

.00168

.00183

.00198.00212.00219.00217.00208

.00197

.00188

.00182

.00180

.00182

.00186

.00191

.00198

.00208

.00220

.00235

.00253

.00273

.00297

.00323

.00353

.00387

.00424

.00463

.00506

.00551

.00602

.00662

.00734

.00815

OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE

Numberliving at

beginning ofage interval

(3)

lx

100,00098,92698,40797,984

100,00097,27897,10696,99596,911

96,83896,77396,71296,65796,605

96,55896,51296,46696,41396,347

96,26196,15496,02795,88295,720

95,54695,35795,15594,94794,741

94,54494,35894,18194,00993,840

93,66993*49493,31693,13192,938.

92,73392,51692,28292,03091,757

91.46091*13790,78490.39989,980

89s52689,03288.49787;91187,266

?umber dyingduring

Ige interval

(4)

,dx

1,074519423706

2,7221721118473

6561555247

4646536686

107127145162174

189202208206197

186177172169171

175178185193205

217234252273297

323353385+19454

494535586645711

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

272540

6,72090,148

97,68097,19297,05%96,95396,875

96,80596,74396,68496,63296,581

96,53596,.48996,44096,38096,304

96,20796,09095,95595,80195,633

95,45195,25695,05194,84494,643

94,45194,26994*09593,92593*755

93,58193,40693,22393,03592,835

92,62592,39992,15591,89491,608

91,29990.96190,59190,19089,753

09927988,76488,20487,58986,910

In thisand all

subsequentage intervals

(6). .T,

6,762,3656,762,0936,161,5536,754.833

6,762,3656,664,6856,567,4936,470,4426,373,489

6,276,6146,179,8096,083,0665,986,3825,889,750

5,793,1695,696,6345,600,1455,503,7055,407,325

5,311,0215,214,8145, 118,7245,022.7694,926,968

4,831,3354,735,8844,640,6284,545,5774,450,733

4,356,0904,261,6394,167,3704,073,2753,979,350

3,885,5953,792,0143,698,6083,605,3853,512,350

3,419,5153,326,8903,234,4913,142,3363,050,442

2,958,8342,867,5352,776,5742,685.9832,595,793

2!50610402,416.7612,327,9972,239,7932,152,204

AVBRAGEREMAININGL2FETINF,

Averagenumber of

years of uferemaining atbeginning ofage interval

(7)oex

67.6268.3668.7168.94

67.6268.5167.6366.7165.77

64.8263.8662.9061.9360.97

60.0059.0258.0557.0856.12

55.1754.2353.3052.3951.47

50.5749.6648.7747.8746.98

46.0745.1644.2543.3342.41

41.4840.5639.6438.7137.79

36.8735.9635.0534.1433.24

32<3531.4630.5829.7128.85

27.9927.l&26.3125.4824.66

17

TABLE 7. L2FE TABLE FOR THE WHITE MALE POPWTION IN NOKTROPOLITAN AWS: ~I~D STA~S, 1959-61—Con.

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+f

YEARS

50-51 ..............51-52 ..............52-53 ..............53-54 ..............’54-55 ..............

55-56 ..............56-57 ..............57-5s..............5s-59 ..............59-60..............

60-61 ..............61-62..............62-63..............63-64..............64-65 ..............

65-66...............66-67 ..............67-6S ..............6s-69..............69-70..............

70-71 ..............71-72..............72-73 ..............73-74..............74-75 ..............

75-76..............76-77..............77-78..............78-79..............79-80..............

80-81..............S1-S2..............82-83..............S3-S4..............84-So..............

85-86..............86-87 ..............S7-88 ..............8s-89..............89-90 ..............

90-91..............91-92 ..............92-93 ..............93-94 ..............94-95 ..............

95-96 ..............96-97..............97-98..............98-99..............99-100 .............

100-101............101-102 ............102-103............103-104............104-105 ............

105-106 ............106-107 ............107-10s............loe-lo9. ...........109-110............

18

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

3eginning of~ge intervaliying duringinterval

(2)

19Z

.00905

.00999

.01093

.01185

.01279

.01376

.014s3

.01607

.01752

.01917

.02096

.022s2

.02475

.02674

.02881

.03101

.03338

.03591

.03S65

.04160

. .04473.04812.05194.05631.06126

.06671

.07263

.07915

.0S633

.09426

.10350

.11395

.12478

.13522

.14522

.15840

.17263

.18764

.20368

.22061

.23755

.25407

.27049

.28665

.30166

.31416

.32915

.34450

.3601s

.37616

.39242

.40891

.42562

.44250

.45951

.47662

.49378

.51095

.52810

.54519

OF 100,000BORN ALIVE

Numberliving at

Beginning ofLge interval

(3)

Ix

e6,55585,772S4,9L583,98782,991

sl,93080,S0379,60578,32676,953

75,47s73,S9672,21070,42368,540

66,56564.50162,34860,10957,786

55,3s352,90650,36047,74545,056

42.29639,47436,6o833,71030,s00

27.S9725,00922,16019,39516,772

14,33612,0659,9S2S,1096,458

5,0333,8372,8622,08S1,490

1,040713479314201

12576452614

s4210

fumber dyingduring

~ge interval

(4)

,dx

783857928996

1,061

1,1271,19s1,2791,3731,475

1,5S21,6861,7871,8S31,975

2.0642,1532,2392,3232,403

2,4772.5462,6152,6892,760

2,8222,8662,89s2,9102,903

2,8882,S492,7652,6232,436

2,2712,0S31,s731,6511,425

1,19697577459s450

32723416511376

493119126

421

:

STATIONARY population

In the ageinterval

(5)

,L,

86,163S5,34384,45183,48982,461

81,36780,20378,96577,64076,215

74,68773,05371,31669,48167,553

65,53363,42561,2285S,94856,585

54,14451,63349,05246,40043,676

40,88538,04135,15932,25529,349

26.45323,5S420,77718,08415.554

13,20011,0249,0467,2845,745

4,4353.3502,4751,7s91,265

877596396257163

10161352011

63201

In thisand all

subsequent~ge intervals

(6)

Tx

2,065,2941,979.1311,S93;7S81,809,3371,725,S48

1,643,3871,562,0201,481,8171,402,8521,325,212

1,248.9971,174,3101,101,2571,029,941

960,460

892,907827,374763,949702,721643,773

587,1ss533,0444s1,411432,359385,959

342,2S3301,398263,357228,198195,943

166,594140.141116,55795,7s077,696

62,14248,94237,91828,87221,58s

15,s4311,4088,05s5,5833,794

2,5291,6521.056660403

2401397s4323

126311

AVE8AGEREMAININGLIFET~

Averagenumber of

7ears of life:emaining atJeginning ofage interval

(7Y

8X

23.8623.0722.3021.5420.80

20.0619.3318.6117.9117.22

16.5515.S915.2514.6314.01

13.4112.8312.2511.6911.14

10.6010.0s9.569.068.57

8.097.647.196.776.36

5.975.6o5.264.944.63

4.334.063.803.563.34

3.152.972.822.672.55

2.432.322.212.102.01

1.911.831.751.671.60

1.531.461.401.351.29

I

TAELE 8. LIFE TAELE FOR THE NRITE FWLE POPULATION IN NONMF.TROPOLITAN AREAS: UNITED STATES, 1959-61

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+t

DAYS

o-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-3................3-28...............20-365.............

YEARS

o-1................1-2................2-3................3-4................4-5................

5-6................6-7................7-8................0-9................9-10...............

10-11..............11-12..............12-13..............13-14..............14-15..............

15-16..............16-17..............17-18..............18-19..............19-20..............

20-21..............21-22 .:............22-23 ..............23-24..............24-25..............

25-26 ..............26-27 ..............27-28 ..............28-29..............29-30 ..............

30-31 ..............31-32 ..............32-33..............33-34..............34-35..............

35-36 ..............36-37 ..............37-38..............38-39..............39-40..............

40-41 ..............41-42 ..............42-43 ..............43-44..............44-45..............

45-46 ..............46-47..............47-48 ..............48-49 ..............49-50..............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

beginning ofage intervaldying duringinterval

(2)

0.00813.00360.00321.00579

.02057

.00160

.00091

.00069

.00059

.00051

.00045

.00040

.00036

.00033

.00031

.0003i

.00032

.00036

.00041

.00047

.00053

.00058

.00061

.00063

.00065

.00067

.00068

.00070

.00071

.00072

.00074

.00076

.00079

.00082

.00086

.00091

.00097

.00104

.00113

.00123

.00134

.00146

.00157

.00169

.00182

.00197

.00213

.00232

.00254

.00277

.00302

.00330

.00361

.00394

OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE

Numberliving at

beginning ofage interval

(3)

lx

100,00099,18798,83098,513

100,00097,94397,78697,69797,629

97,57297,52297,47997,4409Z,405

97,37297,34297,31297,28197,247

97,20797,16197,10997,05396,993

96,93296,86996,80496,73896.671

96,60296,53396,46196,38896.313

96,23496,15196,06395.97095,870

95,76195,64395,51595,37695,226

95,06594,89294.70694;50494,284

94,04593,78493,50093,19192,855

iumber dyingduring

Ige interval

(4)

tdx

813357317570

2,057157896857

3030313440

4652566061

6365666769

838893100109

118128139150161

173186202220239

261284309336366

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

272542

6,75390,699

98,26697,86497,74297,66397,600

97,54797,50197,45997,42297,389

97,35797,32797,29797,26497,227

97.18497,13597,08197,02396,962

96,90196,83696,77296,70496,636

96,56896,49796,42596,35096,273

96,19396,10796,01695,92195,815

95,70395,57995.44595;30095,146

94,97894,79994,60594,39494,165

93,91493,64293.34693,o2392,672

In thisand all

subsequent .age intervals

(6)

T,

7,455,2647,454.9927,454,4507,447.697

7,455,2647,356,9987,259,1347,161.3927,063,729

6,966,1296,868,5826,771,0816,673,6226,576,200

6,478,S116,381,4546,284,1276,~86,8306,089,566

5,992,3395,895,1555,79S,0205.700,9395,603,916

5,506.9545,410,0535,313,2175,216,4455,119,741

5,023,1054,926,5374,s30,0404,733,6154,637,265

4,540,9924,444,7994,348,6924,252,6764,156,755

4,060,9403,965,2373,S69,65S3,774,2133,67S,913

3,583,7673,48S,7893,393,9903,299,3853,204.991

3,110,8263,016,9122,923,2702.829,9242,736,901

AWRAGEREMAININGLIFETIMF,

Averagenumber of

years of liferemaining atbeginning ofage interval

(7)

74.5575.1675.4375.60

74.5575.1274.2473.3072.35

71.3970.4369.4668.4967.51

66.54.55.5664.5S63.6062.62

61.6560.6759.7158.7457.78

56.S155.8554.5953.9252.96

52.0051.0350.0749.1148.15

47.1946.2345.2744.3143.36

42.4141.4640.5139.573S.63

37.7036.7735.8434.9133.99

33.0832.1731.2630.3729.47

19

TABLE 8. LIFE TABLE FOR THE WHITE F~LE POPULATIONIN NONMETROPOLITANAREAS: UNITED STATES,1959-61-Con.

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+f

YEARS

50-51 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51-52 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52-53 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53-54 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54-55 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

55-56 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56-57 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .57-58 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58-59 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .59-60 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

60-61 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61-62 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62-63 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63-6+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64-65 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

65-66 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66-67 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .67-68 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .68-69 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .69-70 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

70-71 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71-72 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72-73 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .73-7+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . .74-75 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

75-76 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

76-77 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .77-78 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .78-79 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .79-80 . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

80-81 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

81-82 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82-83 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83-64 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .84-85 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

85-86 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .86-87 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .87-88 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .88-89 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .89-90 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

90-91 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .91-92 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92-93 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .93-94 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94-95 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

95-96 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .96-97 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .97-98 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .98-99 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .99-100 . . . . . . . . . . . . .

100-101............101-102............102-103 ............103-104 ............104-105............

105-106 ............106-107 ............107-108............108-109............109-110............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive aeeginning o:ge inte~al.ying duz&nginterval

(2)

19X

.00432

.00472.00512.00551.00589

.00632

.00681

.00741

.00813

.00898

.00993

.01096

.01208

.01328

.01458

.01601

.01760

.01941

.02148

.02383

.02636

.02915

.03237

.03612.04041

.04501

.05000

.05579

.06261

.07048

.07967

.08982

.10019

.11006

.11953

.13496

.15182

.16940

.18762

.20641

.22573

.24534

.26466

.28305

.29979

.31416

.32915

.34450

.36018.-37616

.39242

.40891

.42562

.44250

.45951

.47662

.49378

.51095.52810.54519

OF 100,000BOW ALIVR

Numberliving at

teginning of:ge interval

(3)

Ix

92,48992,08991,65491,18590,683

90,14889.57988,96988,31087,591

86,80585,94285,00083,97382,858

81,65080,34378,92977,39775,734

73,93071,98069,88267,62065,178

62,54459,72956,74253.57750;222

46,68242,96339.,10435,18731,314

27,57123,85020,22916.80213,650

10,8338,3876,3304.6543*337

2*3371.6031,075705451

2811711015832

179521

[umber dyingduring

Lge interval

(4)

,dx

400435469502535

569610659719786

863942

1,0271,1151,208

1,3071,4141,5321,6631,804

1,9502,0982,2622,4422,634

2,8152,9873,1653.3553,540

“3,7193,8593,9173.8733,743

3,7213,6213,4273,1522.81?

2,4462,0571.6761,3171,000

734528370254170

2615

84311

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

92,28991,87291,41990,93490,415

89,86489,27388,64087,95087,198

86,37385,47284,48683,41682,254

80.99679,63678.16376,56674,832

72,95570,93168,75166,39963,861

61,13658,23655,15951,90048,452

44,82241,03437,14633.25029,443

25,71022,04018,51615.22612,241

9,6107,3585,.4923,9962,837

1,9691,339890578366

22613679i525

147320

In thisand all

subsequent:ge intenals

(6)

T,

2,644,2292,551,9402,460,0682,368,6492,277,715

2,187,3002,097,4362,008,1631,919,5231,831,573

1,744,3751,658,0021,572,5301,488,0441,404,628

1,322,3741,241,3781,161,7421,083,5791,007,013

932,181859,226788,295719*544653;145

589,284528,148469,912414,753362,853

314,401269,579228,545191,399158,149

128,706102,99680,95662,44047,214

34*91325;36318,00512.5138,517

5,6803,7112,372“1.482

904

538312

1769752

2713631

Averagenumber Of

rears of life:emaining a~)eginning oflge interval

(7)

8,

28.5927.7126.8425.9825.12

2+.2623.4122.5721.7420.91

20.1019.2918.5017.7216.95

16.2015.4514.7214.0013.30

12.6111.9411.2810.6410.02

9.428.848.287.747.22

6.736.275.845.445.05

4.674.324.003.723..46

3.233.02Z.842.692.55

2.432.322.212.102.01

1.911.fr31.751.671.60

1.531.461.401.351.29

20

!II

TABLE 9. LIFE TAELE FOR THE NONNHITE MALE POPULATION IN NONMETROPOLIT~ ARF.AS: UNITED STATES, 1959-61

AGE INTERVA7.I

Period of lifebetween Ewo ages

(1)

Xtox+l’

DAYS

o-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-3................3-28...............28-365.............

YEARS

o-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-2................2-3................3-4................4-5................

5-6................6-7................7-8................8-9................9-10...............

10-11..............11-12..............12-13..............13-14..............14-45..............

15-16..............16-17..............17-18..............18-19..............19-20..............

20-21..............21-22 ..............22-23..............23-24 ..............24-25 ..............

25-26..............26-27..............27-28 ..............20-29..............29-30..............

30-31..............31-32 ...........9..32-33..............33-34 ..............34-35 ..............

35-36 ..............36-37 ..............37-38 ..............38-39..............39-40 ..............

40-41 ..............41-42 ..............42-43 ..............43-44 ..............44-45 ..............

45-46..............46-47 ..............47-48 ..............48-49 ..............49-50 ..............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

>eginning ofage intervaliy~ingdgng

(2)

0.01366.00616.01014.02497

.05390

.00436

.00229

.00154

.00120

.00098

.00082

.00071

.00065

.00065

.00069

.00076

.00087

.00100

.00116

.00134

.00154

.00179

.00211

.00247

.00286

.00324

.00355

.00377

.00392

.00407

.00422

.00434

.00444

.00451

.00459

.00468

.00482

.00501

.00526

.00552

.00581

.00619

.00667

.00723

.00788

.00854

.00911

.00954

.00988

.01019

.01062

.01127

.01223

.01344

OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE

Numberlivipg at

beginning ofage interval

(3)

Ix

100.00098,63498,02697,032

100,00094.61094,19893,98293,837

93.72593,63393,55793,49193s430

93,36993,30593,23493,15393,059

92,95192,82792,68492,51892,323

92,09591,83191*53491,20990,865

90,50990,14189,76189,37188,975

88,57388,16787,75+87,33186,893

86,43685,95985,45984,93084,364

83,75483,09382,38481?63380,854

80,05579,23978,39777,51476,566

Jumber dyingduring

~ge inte~val

(4)

~dx

1,366608994

2,422

5,390412216145112

9276666161

64718194108

124143166195228

264297325344356

368380390396402

406413423438457

477500529566610

661709751779799

816842883948

1.029

STATIONARY POPULATION

(5)

(Lx

272538

6,67488,477

95,96194,40494,09093,90993,781

93,68093,59593,52493,46093,399

93*33793,27093,19393,10693,005

92,88992,75692,60292,42092,209

91,96391,68291s37191,03790,687

90.325e9,95189,56689,17388,773

88,37087,96187.54287,11286,665

86,19885,70985,19484,64784,059

83.42482.73882;00981,24380,454

79,64778,81877,95677,04076,052

In thisand all

subsequentage interval[

(6)

T,

6,080,6696,080,3976,079.8596,073s185

6,080.6695,984,7085,890,3045,796,2145,702,305

5,608,5245,514,8445,421,2495,327,7255,234.265

5,140,8665,047.5294,954,2594,861,0664.767,960

4,674.9554.582,0664,489,3104,396,7084,304,288

4,212,0794,120,1164,028,4343,937,0633,846,026

3,755*3393,665,0143,575.0633,485,4973,396,324

3,307,5513,219,1813,131,2203,043,6782,956,566

2,869,9012,783,7032,697,9942,612,8002,528,153

2,444,0942,360,6702,277,9322,195,9232,114,680

2,034,2261,954,5791,875,7611,797,8051,72.0,765

Averagenumber of

years of Uferemaining atbeginning ofage interval

(7)

8.

60.816L.6562.0262.59

60.8163.2662.5361.6760.77

59.8458.9057.9556.9956.02

55.0654.1053.1452.1851.24

50.2949.3648.4447.5246.62

45.7444.8744.0143.1742.33

41.4940.6639.8339.0038.17

37.3436.5135.6834.8534.03

33.2032.3831.5730.7629.97

29.1828.4127.6526.9026.15

25.4124.6723.9323.1922.47

21

TABLE 9. LmE TABLE FOR THE NONWHITE MALE POPULATION IN NONNETROPOLITAN ARFAS: UNITED STATES, 1959-61—Con.

AGE INTERVAL

*

Period of lifebetween two ages

(1)

Xtox+t

YEARS

50-51 ..............51-52...............52-53 ..............53-54 ..............54-55............;.

55-56 ..............56-57..............57-58 ..............58-59..............59-60..............

60-61 ..............61-62 ..............62-63..............63-64..............64-65 ..............

65-66 ..............66-67..............6-r-68..............68-69 ..............69-70 ..............

-10-71AL............71-72 ..............72-73 ..............73-74 ..............74-75..............

75-76..............76-77..............77-78 ..............78-79 ..............79-80 ..............

80-81 ..............81-82 ..............82-83..............83-84 ..............84-85..............

85-86 ..............86-87 ..............87-88 ..............88-89..............89-90 ..............

90-91 ..............91-92..............92-93 ..............93-94 ..............94-95 ..............

95-96 ..............96-97 ..............97-98..............98-99 ..............99-100 .............

100-101 ............101-102............102-103 ............103-104 ............104-105............

105-106 ............106-107 ............107-108 ............108-~09............109-110 ............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

>eginning ofage intervaliy~:ein

(2)

19,

.01477

.01612

.01751

.01889

.02030

.02177

.02335

.02498

.02667

.02844

.03026

.03216

.03418

.03635

.03865

.04107

.04356

.04608

.04858

.05108

.05377

.05657

.05912

.06119

.06289

.06412

.06546

.06782

.07202

.07797

.08549

.09357

.10119

.10698

.11085

.12008

.13098

.14447

.16166

.18206

.20454

.22769

.25080

.27294

.29402

.31416

.32915

.34450

.36018

.37616

.39242

.40e91

.42562

.44250

.45951

.47662

.49378

.51095

.52810

.54519

OF 100,000 BOM ALIVE

Numberliving at

>eginning ofLge interval

(3)

I,

75,53774,42273,22271,94070,581

69,14867,64366,06364,41362,695

60,91259,06957,16955,21553,208

51,15249,05146,91444,75342.578

40,40438.23136.06833,93631.859

29,85627,94226,11324,34222,588

20,82719,04717,26515,51813,858

12.32110,8429,4228,0616,758

5,5274,3973,3962,5441,850

1,306896601394252

15796563218

105311

iumber dyingduring

>ge interval

(4)

,dx

1,1151,2001,2821,3591.433

1,5051,5801,6501,7181,783

1,8431.9001,9542,0072,056

2,1012,1372,1612,1752,174

2,1732,1632,1322,0772,003

1,9141,8291,7711,7541,761

1,7801,7821,7471,6601,537

1*4791,4201,3611,3031,231

1.1301,001852694544

41029520714295

614024148

52201

STATIONARY POPULATION

74.97973,82272,58171,26169,864

68,39666,85365,23863,55461,803

59,99158,11956.193”54;21152.180

50,10247,98245,83443,66541,491

39,31837,14935,00232,89830,858

28,89827,02725.22723,46521,708

19,93718.15616,39114,68813,089

11,58210,1318,7417,4106,142

4,9623,8962,9702,1971,577

1,10174a498323204

12676452514

83211

In thisand all

subsequentIge intervals

(6)

1,644,7131,569,7341,495,9121,423,3311,352.070

1,282,2061,213,8101,146,9571,081,7191,018,165

956,362896,371838,252782,059727,848

675,668625,566577,584531,750488,085

446.594407,276370,127335,125302,227

271,369242,471215.444190,217166,752

145,044125,107106,95190,56075,872

62,78351,20141,07032,32924,919

18,77713,8159,9196,9494,752

3,1752,0741,326

828505

301175995429

157421

AVSR4GERENAININGLIFETIN2

Averagenumber of

fears of liferemaining at>eginning oflge interval

21.7721.0920.4319.7819.16

18.5417.9417.3616.7916.24

15.7015.1714.6614.1613.68

13.21L2.7512.3111.8811.46

11.0510.6510.269.889.49

9.098.6a8.257.817.3a

6.966.576.195.845.48

5.104.724.364.013.69

3.403.14‘2.922.732.57

2.432.322.Z12.10z.01

1.911.831.751.671.60

1.531.461.401.351.29

22

TA13LE 10, LIFE TAELE FOR THE NOMITE FENALE POPULATION IN NONMRTROPOLITAN AREAS: UNITED STATES, 1959-61

AGE INTERVAL

Period of lifebetween two ag$s

(1)

Xtox+t

DAYS

o-1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-3................3-28...............28-365 .............

YEARS

o-1................1-2................2-3................3-4................4-5................

5-6................6-7................7-8................a-9................9-10...............

10-11..............11-12..............12-13..............13-14..............14-15..............

15-16..............16-17..............17-la..............la-19..............19-20..............

20-21.............’.21-22 ..............22-23 ..............23-24..............24-25..............

25-26 ..............26-27..............27-2a..............2a-29..............29-30 ..............

*

30-31..............31-32..............32-33..............33-34 ..............34-35..............

35-36 ..............36-37..............37-38..............3a-39 ..............39-40 ..............

40741 ..............41-42 ..............42-43 ..............43-44 ..............44-45 ..............

45-46..............46-47 ..............47-4a ..............4a-49 ..............49-50 .........T....

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive ateginning of.ge interval.y~;ed$ang

(2)

19X

0.01048.00452.ooa17.02095

.04348

.oo3a7

.00213

.00147

.ooloa

.00092

.00078

.00067

.00059

.00052

.0004a

.00047

.00048

.00053

.00060

.00069

.00080

.00093

.00107

.00124

.00142

.00160

.00176

.oola7

.00195

.00203

.00213

.00226

.00245

.oo26a

.00293

.oo31a

.00344

.00371

.00399

.00428

.oo45a

.00489

.00521

.00553

.00590

.00628

.00665

.00697

.00730

.00762

.ooao2

.ooa59

.00941

.01041

OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE

Numberliving at

jeginning of~ge interval

(3)

lx

100,00098,9529a,50497,699

100,00095.65295j2a295,07994,93a

94,a3694.74a94;67494,61094,555

94,50694,46094,41694,37194,321

94,26494,19994,12394,03693*935

93,a1993,68693,53693,37293,197

93,01592,82792,63092,42092,194

91,94791,67791,3a691.07190;733

90,37289,9a589,573a9,134aa.670

88,179a7,659a7,109a6*53085.927

a5,299a4,650a3.971a3,24982.466

Tumber dyingduring

Ige interval

(4)

, dx

1,04844aao5

2,047

4,34a370203141102

a874645549

4644455057

6576a7101116

133150164175la2

18a197210226247

270291315338361

3a7412439464491

52055057960362a

6496797227a3859

STATIONARY POPULATION

In the ageinterval

(5)

,Lx

272541

6,71389,266

96,79295,46795,lao95,00994,aa7

94,79294,71194,64294,5a394s530

94,48394,43994,39394,34794,292

94,23294,16194,0ao93,9a693.a77

93,75393,61193*45493,28493,106

92,92192,72992,52592,30792,070

91,81291,53191,22990,90290,552

90,179a9,77989,353aa,9028a.425

87,91987,3a5a6,a19a6,22a85,613

a4.97584,310a3,61082,a5782.037

.In thisand all

subsequent~ge intervala

(6)

Tx

6,586,4416,586.1696,585,6286,57a,915

6,586s4416,489,649

6,394,1a26,299,0026,203.993

6,109,1066,014.3145,919,6035,824,9615,730,37a

5,635,8485,541,3655,446,9265,352,5335,258,186

5,163,a945,069,6624,975,5014,a81,4214,7a7,435

4,693,55a4,599,ao54,506,1944,412,7404,319,456

4,226,3504,133.4294,040,7003,94a,1753,a55,a6a

3,763,7983,671,9863.5ao,4553,4a9,2263,398,324

3,307,7723,2L7,5933,127,8143,038,4612.949,559

2,861,1342,773,2152,685.8302,599,0112.512,7a3

2,427,1702,342,1952,257*a852.174,2752,091,418

AWRAGERENAININGLIFETIME

Averagenumber of

rears of life:emaining at)eginning oflge interval

65.8666.5666.8667.34

65.8667.a567.1166.2565.35

64.4263.4a62.5361.5760.60

59.6358.6657.6956.7255.75

54.7a53.8252.8651.9150.97

50.0349.104a.1847.2646.35

45.4444.5343.6242.7241.a2

40.9340.0539.183a.3137.45

36.6035.7634.9234.0933.26

32.4531.6430.8330.0429.24

2a.4527.6726.8926.1225.36

23

TABLE 10. LIFE TABLE FOR THE NONWSITR FENAU POPULATION IN NONNETROPOLITAN AREAS: UNITED STATRS, 1959-6 l-Con.

AGE INTERVAL

PeEiOd of lifebezween two ages

(1)

Xtox+t

YEARS

50-51 ..............51-5Z..............5Z-53..............53-54 ..............54-55 ...............

55-56 ..............56-57 ..............57-58 ..............58-59..............59-60..............

60-61 ..............61-62 ..............6Z-63 ..............63-64..............64-65 ..............

65-66 ..............66-67 ..............67-68 ..............68-69 ...............69-70..............

70-71..............71-7Z..............72-73 ..............73-74 ..............74-75 ..............

75-76..............76-77 ..............77-78 ..............78-79..............79-80..............

80-81 ..............81-8Z..............82-83 ..............83-84 ..............84-85 ..............

85-86 ..............86-87..............87-88..............88-89 ..............89-90 ..............

90-91 ..............91-9Z..............9Z-93 ..............93-94 ..............94-95 ..............

95-96 ..............96-97 ..............97-98 ..............98-99..............99-100 .............

100-101 ............101-1OZ............102-103 ............103-104............104-105 ............

105-106 ............106-107............107-108............108-109............109-110 ............

PROPORTIONDYING

Proportionof personsalive at

beginning ofLge inge-alIyinfed$ang

(2)

.01152

.01265

.01378

.01488

.01597

.01705

.01821

.01950

.QZ097

.0ZZ56

.02432

.02606

.02753

.02857

.02928

.0Z979

.03044

.03155

.03339

.03584

.03870

.04156

.04415

.04615

.04771

.04899

.05055

.05294

.05669

.06167

.06775

.07415

.07998

.08425

.08709

.09782

.11048

.12609

.14547

.16794

.19235

.Z1Z46

.24269

.Z6733

.291Z3

.31416

.32915

.34450

.36018

.376i6

.39Z42

.40891

.42562

.44250

.45951

.47662

.49378

.51095

.52810

.54519

OF 100,000 BORN ALIVS

Numberliving at

eginning ofge interval

(3)

81,60780,66679,64678,54877,379

76,14474,84573,4827Z,04970,539

68,94767,27165,51863.71461.893

60,08158,Z9156s51754,73452,906

51.01049,03646,99844,92342,850

40,80538,80636,84534.89+32,916

30,886Z8,794Z6,65924.527ZZ.460

20,50418,49816,45514,380lz*z88

10,2248,2586,46Z4,8943,585

Z*5411,7431,169766490

3061861106335

1910521

lumber dyingduring

,ge interval

(4)

~dx

9411,0201.0981;1691,235

1,Z991,3631.4331,5101,59Z

1,6761,7531,8041,8211,812

1,7901,7741,7831,8281,896

1,9742,038Z,0752,0732,045

1,9991,9611,9511,978Z,030

Z,0922,1352,1322,0671,956

2,006Z,0432,0752,0922.064

1,9661,7961,5681,3091*044

798574403276184

lZO76472816

953

:

STATIONARY POPULATION

(5)

~Lx

81,13680,15779.09777;96376,762

75,49574,1647Z,76571,29469,744

68,10966,39464,6156Z,80460,987

59,18757,40455,6Z553.82051,958

50,02348,01745,96043,88741,828

39,80637,82535,86933,90631,901

Z9,84027,7Z625,592Z3*494Z1,48Z

19,50117,47715,41713*33411s256

9,2417,3605,6784,2403,063

2.1421,456968628398

246148874927

148411

In thisand all

subsequentge intervals

Z,009,3811,928,2451,848,0881,768,9911,691,028

1,614,2661,538,7711,464,6071,391,8421,320,548

1,250,8041,18Z,6951.116,3011,051.686

988,882

9Z7,895868,708811,304755,679701,859

649,901599,878551,861505,901462,014

420,186380,380342,555306,686272,780

Z40,879Z11,039183,313157,721134,2Z7

llZ.74593,24475,76760,35047.016

35,760Z6,51919,15913,4819,241

6,1784,036Z,5801,612984

58634019Z10556

2915732

Averagenumber of

ears of l$fe,emai.ning a~egfnning of.ge interval

(7)

24.6223.9023.20Z2.5221.85

21.20ZO.5619.9319.3Z18.72

18.1417.5817.0416.5115.98

15.441+.9014.3613.8113.27

12.74lZ.2311.7411.2610.78

10.309.809.308.798.29

7.807.336.886.435.98

5.505.044.604.203.83

3.503.212.962.75Z.58

2.432.322.212.102.01

1.911.831.751.671.60

1.531.461.401.351.29

24

I

TABLE 11. PROPORTION OF PERSONS DYING DURING THE YEAR AT SPECIFIED AGES BY COLOR AND SEX: METRO-POLITAN AND NONMETROPOLITAN AREAS WITHIN GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS, 1959-61

GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS

UNITED STATES

Metropolitan ------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------------

NEW ENGLAND

Metropolitan ------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------------

MIDDLE ATLANTIC

Metropolitan ------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------------

EAST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------------

WEST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------------

SOUTH ATLANTIC

Metropolitan ------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------------

EAST SOUTH CE~RAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------------

WEST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------------

MOUNTAIN

Metropolitan ------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------------

PACIFIC

Metropolitan ------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------------

oyears

0.02494.02767

.02215

.02392

.02443

.02345

.02455

.02296

.02304

.02269

.02839

.03260

.02794

.03395

.02708

.02994

.02587

.02911

.02319

.02587

TOTAL POP~TION -

21years

0.00105.00152

.00091

.00105

.00100

.00125

.00105

.00132

.00102;00137

.00103

.00163

.00117

.00170

.00118

.00168

.00128

.00200

.00108

.00162

45years

0.00486.00457

.00430

.00413

.00482

.00435

.00480

.00394

.00437

.00368

.00581

.00578

.00575

.00514

.00479

.00455

.00452

.00436

65years

0.02733.02437

.02698

.02626

.02887

.02696

.02798

.02367

.02538

.02127

.02766

.02733

.02923

.02438

.02648

.02347

.02402

.02347

.02454

.02313

25

.TABLE 11. PROPORTION OF PERSONS DYING DURING THE YEAR AT SPECIFIED AGES BY COLOR AND SEX: METRO-

POLITAN AND NONMETROPOLITAN AREAS WITHIN GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS, 1959-61-Con.

GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS

UNITED STATES

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

NEW ENGLAND

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

MIDDLE ATLANTIC

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

EAST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

WEST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

SOUTH ATLANTIC

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

EAST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

WEST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

MOUNTAIN

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

PACIFIC

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

oyears

D.02517.02722

.02440

.02734

.02422

.02552

.02498

.02590

.02418

.02495

.02589

.02831

.02533

.02945

.02655

.02833

.02810

.03076

.02565

.02739

WHITE MALES

21years

9.00143.00212

.00135

.00153

.00136

.00194

.00150

.00207

.00154

.00199

.00119

.00205

.00143

.00216

.00150

.00236

.00182

.00281

.00149

.00220

45years

).00561.00551

.00536

.00533

.00560

.00554

.00553

.00501

.00523

.00469

.00606

.00652

.00589

.00609

.00573

.00541

.00598

.00561

.00555

.00544

65years

0.03570.03101

.03614

.03484

.03719

.03515

;:;():;

.03404

.02789

.03475

.03254

.03597

.02958

.03444

.03020

.03298

.03092

.03411

.03085

0years

).01911.02057

.01820

.02005

.01868

.01966

.01913

.01906

.01830

.01862

.01929

.02103

.01997

.02410

.02054

.02151

.02131

.02254

.01883

.02133

WHITE FENALES

21years

0.00054.00067

.00047

.00047

s)::;;

.00054

.00059

.00050

.00064

.00049

.00069

.00049

.00073

.00060

.00074

.00064

.00086

.00061

.00074

45years

0.00316.00277

.00314

.00290

.00328

.00298

.00320

.00277

.00288

.00251

;;C);:;

.00305

.00274

.00285

.00244

.00328

.00307

.00328

.00305

65years

0.01823.01601

;:;;;;

.02060

.01927

.01891

.01684

.01634

.01443

.01603

.01608

.01633

.01534

.01565

.01372

.01535

.01563

.01614

.01518

26

TABLE 11. PROPORTIONOF PERSONSDYING DURING THE YEAR AT SPECIFIEDAGES BY COLOR AND SEX: ~TRO-POLITAN AND NONMETROPOLITANAREAS WITHIN GEOGRAPHICDIVISIONS, 1959-61—Con.

GEOGRAPHICDIVISIONS

UNITED STATES

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

NEW ENGLAND

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

MIDDLE ATLANTIC

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

EAST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

WRST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

SOUTH ATLANTIC

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

EAST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

WEST SOUTH CENTWL

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

MO~AIN

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

PACIFIC

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

oyears

).04327.05390

.04392

.04365

.04631

.05051

.04133

.04534

.04135

.05634

.04737

.05527

.04432

.05631

.04498

.05059

.04989

.06064

.03211

.04536

NONWHITEMALES

21years

0.00226.00324

;;::;;

.00232

.00174

.00213

.00263

.00268

.00340

.00231

.00329

.00273

.00347

;00278.00310

.00260

.00510

.00155

.00289

45years

0.01047.01019

.00921

.00771

,01120.00927

.00981

.00726

.01023

.00969

.01295

.01196

.01156

.00963

.00985

.00821

.01093

.00927

.00642

.00646

65years

o ;:;:;;

.04431

.04154

.04477

.03854

.04498

.03572

.04713

.03998

.05221

.04939

.04932

.03758

.04459

.03724

.03514

.02455

.03313

.02676

0years

0.03548.04348

.03253

.02220

.03764

.03718

.03466

.03736

.03618

.04259

.03884

.04393

.03628

.04579

.03701

.04207

.03764

.04907

;;;:;;

NONWHITEFEMALES

21years

0.00113.00160

.00106

.00125

.00115

.00100

.00108

.00109

.00095

.00188

.00111

.00153

.00142

.00174

.00120

.00156

.00149

.00177

.00071

.00125

45years

0.007’73.00762

.00588

.00484

.00735

.00769

.00773

.00719

.00811

.00848

.00915

.00809

.00925

.00763

.00776

.00714

.00728

.00722

.00486

.00516

65years

0.03137.02979

.02832

.02036

.02930

.02746

.03122

.02656

.03227

.02640

.03458

.03426

.03522

.02813

.03198

.02689

.02617

.02387

.02062

.01774

27

TABLE 12. NUMBER SURVIVINGTO SPECIFIEDAGES OUT OF 100,000BORN ALIVE BY COLOR AND SEX: METRO-POLITANAND NONMETROPOLITANAREAS WITHIN GEOGRAPHICDIVISIONS, 1959-61

GEOGRAPHICDIVISIONS

UNITED STATES

Metropolitan------------------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------------------

NEW ENGLAND

Metropolitan------------------------------------------------Nometropolitan---------------------------------------------

MIDDLE ATLANTIC

Metropolitan------------------------------------------------Nometropolitan---------------------------------------------

EAST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------------------

WEST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------------------

SOUTH AT~NTIC

Metropolitan------------------------------------------------Nometropolitan---------------------------------------------

EAST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------------------------------------------Nometropolitan---------------------------------------------

WEST SOUTH CENTWL

Metropolitan------------------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------------------

MOUNTAIN

Metropolitan------------------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------------------

PACIFIC

Metropolitan------------------------------------------------Non=tropolitan---------------------------------------------

TOTAL POPULATION

21years

96,24495,6oO

96,70496>261

96,37496,255

96,32696,257

96,45796,237

95,77194,991

95,74894,838

95,84595,205

95,90395,114

96,45495,770

45years

91,76890,697

92,94192>498

92,01592,116

91,95092,234

92,48092,226

90,42588,926

90,33089,065

91,10589,969

91,33289,727

92,22591,043

65years

70,78771,790

72,72073,262

70,49771,763

70,90574,121

72,85075,951

67,78267,205

67,57670,006

70,44171,827

71,90371,802

72,77572,704

I

I

I

t

28

TABLE 12. mER SURVIVING TO SPECIFIED AGES OUT OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE BY COLOR AND SEX: METRO-POLITAN AND NONMETROPOLITAN AREAS WITHIN GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS, 1959-61—Con.

GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONSe

.

UNITED STATES

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

NEW ENGLAND

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

MIDDLE ATLANTIC

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

EAST.,NORTHCENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

WFST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

SOUTH ATLANTIC

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

EAST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

WST SOUTH CEN~L

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

MOUNTAIN

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

PACIFIC

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

WHITE MALES

21years

96,00695,357

96,24295,575

96,20295,659

96>05595,538

96,01395,642

95,91595>288

95,86995,132

95,69095,088

95,35194,584

95,93195,265

45years

91,11:89,52f

91,67090,71s

91,53290,387

91,22590,360

91,40590,483

90,85988,724

90,50188,430

90,47588,906

89,78087,778

90,87289,339

65years

65,39S66,565

65,79366,252

65,15465,179

65,71767,749

66,71469,912

64,41463,684

64,30965,937

65,33566,879

64,94465,676

65,93666,206

WHITE FEMALES

21years

97,20696,869

97,38097,022

97,30397,053

97,22797,105

97,31097,114

97,17696,833

97,01896,445

96,93296,638

96,76196,414

97,21496,764

45years

94,34094,045

94,65894,488

94,43194,238

94,38094,352

94,68694,520

94,33393,929

94,19293,485

94,06793,843

93,62093,284

94,21193,735

65years

80,24981,650

80,19580,835

79,13279,432

79,99881,406

81,87783,341

81,27981,584

81,52981,748

81,68782,978

80,39680,747

80,75681,232

29

TABLE 12; NUMBER SURVIVING TO SPECIFIED AGES OUT OF 100,000 BORN ALIVE BY COLOR AND SEX: METRO-POLITANAND NONMETROPOLITANAREAS WITHIN GEOGRAPHICDIVISIONS, 1959-61—Con.

GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS

UNITED STATES

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

NEW ENGLAND

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

MIDDLE ATLANTIC

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

EAST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------No~etropolitan ---------------------------

WEST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

SOUTH ATLANTIC

metropolitan------------------,------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

EAST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

~ST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

MOUNTAIN

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

PACIFIC

Metropolitan ------------------------------Nonmetropolitan ---------------------------

NONWHI~ MALES

21years

93,50691>831

93,50294,600

93,10392,836

93,86593>236

93,95090,908

92,85891,680

93,26691,615

93,17792,250

92,35689,776

95,14792,332

45years

83,10480,055

84,93184,945

81,88284,428

84,13485,139

83>19679,822

80,77978,729

81,54880,020

82>62081,391

81,70275,447

88,23683,765

65years

51,48351,152

55,88153,916

50,35256,156

53,33559,253

50,82351,432

44,80845,506

47,84152,988

51,65055,376

;;,;;;>

64,79864,394

NONWHITE FEMALES

21years

95,04093,686

95,31296,298

94,83194,911

95,20094,534

95,02693,412

94,60593,681

94,80893,398

94,67393,889

94,40892,358

96,42194,531

—.

45years

87,53085,299

88,56990,901

87,24987,866

88,06687,521

87,74584,983

85,51084,892

85,61084,571

87,56785,987

86,70383,847

;;,:;:>

65years

61,17460,081

66,43069,925

62,59264,202

61,55465,629

60,43661,921

56,47556,491

56,87Z61,055

60,56262,647

66,82164,613

73,72672,559

30

TULE 13. AVERAGE REMAINING LIFETIME IN YEARS AT SPECIFIED AGES BY COLOR AND SEX: METROPOLITANAND NONMETROPOLITANAREAS WITHIN GEOGRAPHICDIVISIONS, 1959-61

GEOGRAPHICDIVISIONS

UNITED STATES

Metropolitan------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------

NEW ENGLAND

Metropolitan------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------

MIDDLE ATLANTIC

Metropolitan------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------

EAST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------

~ST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan----T,----------------------------

SOUTH ATUNTIC

Metropolitan------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------

EAST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------

WEST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------

MOUNTAIN

Metropolitan------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------

PACIFIC

Metropolitan------------------------------------Nonmetropolitan---------------------------------

oyears

69.8369.98

70.6470.61

69.5270.01

69.7570.98

70.7771.82

68.9468.26

68.6568.87

69.8370.03

70.3969.69

70.9070.53

TOTAL POPULATION

21years

51.4152.00

51.9252.20

51.0051.56

51.2752.56

52.2253.45

50.8350.66

50.5351.41

51.6952.35

52.2152.02

52.3652.45

45years

29.1830.04

29.4129.72

28.7029.22

28.9930.23

29.8331.16

28.9229.12

28.6529.83

29.6030.58

30.0930.33

30.0730.44

65years

14.1814.72

14.1114.24

13.6813.98

13.9314.58

14.5315.17

14.5614.62

14.2114.65

14.6815.20

14.9214.84

14.8315.02

31

TABLE 130 AVERAGE REMAINING LIFETIM8 IN YEARS AT SPECIFIED AGES BY COLOR AND SEX: METROPOLITANAND NONMETROPOLITAN AREAS WITHIN GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS, 1959-61-Con. 9

GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS

UNITED STATES

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropoli.tan---------

NEW ENGLAND

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

MIDDLE ATMNTIC

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

EAST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

WEST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

SOUTH ATLANTIC

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

EAST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

WEST SO~H CENTW

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

MOUNTAIN

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

PACIFIC

Metropolitan ------------Nonmetropolitan ---------

0yeara

67.4867.62

67.7367.47

67.3767.15

67.4568.06

67.9668.96

67.4766.75

67.1267.25

67.4367.69

67.2866.86

67.7767.58

WHITE MAtiS

21years

49.1149.66

49.2149.38

48.8748.96

49.0449.99

49.5850.86

49.1648.81

48.8049.44

49.2649.91

49.3249.38

49.4649.68

45years

26.9427.99

26.9127.25

26.5926.99

26.8528.06

27.3528.99

27.0527.36

26.8228.13

27.2528.43

27.4928.17

27.4028.06

65years

12.6713.41

12.6012.70

12.3312.65

12.4713.29

12.8813.86

13.1313.38

12.7513.61

12.9913.75

13.3113.50

13.0913.57

0years

73.9974.55

73.9474.14

73.2473.45

73.7674.41

74.8875.51

74.6974.47

74.4674.24

74.8675.36

74.4074.18

74.6574.78

wHIm FEMALES

21years

55.0255.85

54.8455.32

54.1854.58

54.7755.53

55.8656.64

55.7755.80

55.6555.86

56.1256.86

55.7755.79

55.6956.16

45years

32.2233.08

31.9732.39

31.3531.75

31.9532.71

32.9833.79

32.9833.06

32.8533.17

33.3734012

33.1333.18

32.9733.49

65years

15.6816.20

15.4615.74

14.9715,31

15.4415.91

16.1816.63

16.2916.17

16.0216.13

16.5216.94

16.5716.43

16.4316.74

32

TABLE 13. AVERAGE REMAINING LIFET7.MEIN YEARS AT SPECIFIEDAGES BY COLOR AND SEX: METROPOLITANAND NONMETROPOLITANAREAS WITHIN GEOGRAPHICDIVISIONS, 1959-61—Con.

GEOGRAPHICDIVISIONS

UNITED STATES

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

NEW ENGLAND

Metropolitan------------Nonmetr.opolitan---------

MIDDLE ATLANTIC

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

EAST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

WEST NORTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

SODTH ATWIC

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

EAST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

WEST SOUTH CENTRAL

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

MOUNTAIN

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

PACIFIC

Metropolitan------------Nonmetropolitan---------

oyeara

61.7960.81

62.8763.65

61.0262.80

62.3664.43

61.6460.30

59.5459.15

60.5260.95

61.7062.45

62.3560.40

67.2465.54

NONWHITEMALES

21years

44.8144.87

45.9946.16

44.2646.41

45.19 ~47.83 I

44.3844.88

42.8343.16

43.5945.18

44.9346.36

46.1945.77

49.4749.60

45years

24.5725.41

25.0525.55

24.2925.49

24.7127.04

24,2225.22

22.9723.91

23.7525.74

24.8626.72

26.2828.10

28.1829.27

65years

12.5613.21

11.9613.13

12.3912.47

12.2813.60

12.2412.75

12.3112.90

12.3313.00

12.7613.73

13.6615.03

14.0114.51

0years

66.7365.86

68.1070.59

66.7767.52

66,8667.86

66.4665.41

64.8064.99

64.9765.52

66.6967.02

6801166.98

72.0770.28

NONWHITE FEMALES

21years

49.0649.10

50.3052.13

49.2649.99

49.0950.61

48.7948.77

47.3348.18

47.3548.93

49.2650.19

50.9551.25

53.6453.15

45years

27.9328.45

;:.;;.

28.2128.76

27.7929.41

27.5228.17

26.7027.60

26.7828.50

28.0129.42

30.1930.97

31.6431.69

65years

14.8815.44

14.5815.86

14.6914.97

14.6615.32

14.7114.48

14.4715.52

14.4014.95

15.2615.99

15.5816.71

16.4516.19

33

* U. S. GOVERNM~T PRINTING OFFICE : 1968 0-284-343

NATIONALCENTER

For H EAL.THSTATISTICS )