by Jason S. Brinkley, PhD, MA, MS
On the Brink addresses topics related to data, analytics, and visualizations on personal health and public health research. This column explores current practices in the health arena and how both the data and mathematical sciences have an impact. (The opinions and views represented here are the author’s own and do not reflect any group for which the author has an association.)

Jason S. Brinkley, PhD, MA, MS
Between 1950 and 2017, the United States population has more than doubled from about 158 million people to nearly 327 million. While growth has come from a combination of changes in birth rates, average life spans, and immigration, the simple fact is that these changes have impacted many of our public health systems and health policy at both the national and local level. Being able to look back at how our population has changed can provide evidence of how best to forecast what lies ahead and provide a deeper understanding of the challenges to come. I recently found a terrific online tool that can help us do just that.
Population Pyramid
In playing with the website, one can look across a wide array of time points. Listed below are the US population pyramids in 10-year blocks from 1950 to 2000. While the 1950 and 2017 visuals look very different, the most interesting phenomenon demonstrated here is the “hump” that moves through the “baby boom,” that generation of US residents born after World War II. The boomer bubble here is distinct and provides insight as to how demographics have shifted over the past 67 years, which is almost certainly associated with the shifts in our national health policy and health systems. It seems clear that a system designed for a 1950 population would not perform as well with the population of 2017.
The website can provide hours of distracted fun. I suggest that you take some time to look at a couple of different countries and regions of the world and see just how different they are from the US. Population Pyramid well documents gender by age disparities in places like Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Hong Kong. Likewise, we see several countries whose populations are already bulleting just like the United States (for example Canada, France, Norway, Iceland, and Sweden) which provides some indirect evidence that the UN forecasts could be accurate.
The population bullet doesn’t have to be a deadly prospect; indeed, it can be a driver for innovation and a place for discussion of how we manage populations that continue to shift and age. What these graphs don’t convey is the real growth of the overall population. If the population pyramids were resized to correspond to the total population, then the 2017 graph would be twice the size of the 1950 graph. Those changes in net population have also impacted health systems and policy, and there is no known limit as to how large a population the planet can sustain.
Of course, maybe we have it all wrong and the Earth is really flat and the excess population will just fall off the edge. That could certainly be a discussion point at the 2017 Flat Earth International Conference, which is being held in November in Raleigh, North Carolina. Sorry to say that registration for the conference is full and all the tickets have been sold out.
If that doesn’t strike you as a little bit funny, I can’t help you.
Jason S. Brinkley, PhD, MS, MA is a Senior Researcher and Biostatistician at Abt Associates Inc. where he works on a wide variety of data for health services, policy, and disparities research. He maintains a research affiliation with the North Carolina Agromedicine Institute and serves on the executive committee for the NC Chapter of the American Statistical Association and the Southeast SAS Users Group. Follow him on Twitter. [Full Bio]
Previous posts by this author:
- The Unknown Unknowns of Missing Data
- Communicating Science–More Than Just Good Words?
- Counting Alabamas
- The Third World in Your Own Backyard
- The Unrealistic Gold Standard
- Does MACRA Signal the Beginning of the End for Medicare Claims Data?
- Think You Aren’t Extraordinary? Odds Are You’re Wrong
- Mapping by Words
- Are We Asking Too Much From Surveys?
- Making Better Comparisons
- What Kills Us?
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