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Kentucky’s population is getting older, and that is expected to put a strain on the state’s health-care system, which already lacks enough primary-care providers, Sarah Ladd reports for the Kentucky Lantern.
An
analysis of new census data by the
Kentucky State Data Center found that Appalachian Kentucky is aging faster than the rest of the state, possibly due to young people moving away, but the oldest counties are in West Kentucky, while counties with colleges and military clusters are home to the younger populations Ladd
reports.
The data show that from 2010 to 2020, the median age of Kentuckians increased from 38.1 to 39.4 and the share of people 65 and older increased from 13.3% (just over one in eight) to 17% (just over one in six).
“It’s not unexpected that the population is aging like this,” said KSDC director Matthew H. Ruther, a University of Louisville professor, told Ladd.
Ruther said that the increase from 13% to 17% in people 65 and older is “a really big jump.”
“And it’s not done yet. We’re going to still be seeing this going into the future,” estimating that the 65 and older population will eventually hit 20%, he told Ladd.
“The peak of the baby boom was in 1957,” he explained. “Those people are now 66. And so you’re … still going to be seeing this older population get larger, both in absolute terms and as a percent of the population.”
Effects on health care and health
With Kentucky’s aging population comes an influx of medical needs that the state and its health-care systems will have to consider, writes Ladd.
“Yet large areas of Kentucky suffer from a lack of primary-care providers,” Ladd notes. “The
Kentucky Primary Care Association said in 2022 that 94% of the state’s 120 counties don’t have enough.”
“People are already having trouble getting to doctors or hospitals because of supply issues,” Ruther told Ladd. “If nothing changed, then this is going to become more problematic in the future.”
That trend is slowing, but is continuing.
Preliminary data released June 1 show that in 2022, Kentucky deaths (57,269) exceeded
births (52, 219) by 5,050.
However, Kentucky was one of only 13 states that showed an increase in births in 2022, barely: five more births than in 2021, according to the
preliminary data for 2022 and
final numbers for 2021.
Nationally, the number of births has plateaued after a modest increase in 2021,
reports Tim Henderson of
States Newsroom, Kentucky Lantern’s parent organization, citing CDC data available May 30.