12/14/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/14/2025 13:08
HONOLULU - While life expectancy across the United States declined significantly during the COVID-19 pandemic, a new study led by researchers at the University of Hawaiʻi Thompson School of Social Work & Public Health and the Hawaiʻi State Department of Health found that Hawaiʻi experienced a smaller decline compared to national trends.
Drs. Yan Yan Wu, Michael Phillips, and Kathryn L. Braun from the University of Hawaiʻi Department of Public Health Sciences and Dr. Lance Ching and Claire Prieto from the Department of Health Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion Division, found that life expectancy in Hawaiʻi declined by 1.4 years, from 82.1 in 2019 to 80.7 in 2021. Nationwide, the decline over the same period was 2.4 years, from 78.8 to 76.4. Their findings were published in the Asia Pacific Journal of Public Health.
"The smaller magnitude and delayed timing of Hawaiʻi's decline may reflect the state's geographic isolation and early implementation of public health interventions," said Dr. Wu, the study's lead author. "In 2022, life expectancy partially rebounded by 0.5 years in Hawaiʻi and by 0.9 years nationally, with Hawaiʻi remaining about four years higher than the U.S. average throughout the pandemic."
"Hawaiʻi ranks among the top U.S. states for COVID-19 vaccination coverage. By May 2023, data reported by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) showed that more than 90% of residents received at least one dose and more than 80% were considered fully vaccinated with the primary COVID-19 vaccine series," said Dr. Ching, epidemiologist with the DOH Chronic Disease Prevention & Health Promotion Division. "These high vaccination levels-reached over the course of the pandemic-helped delay the peak of COVID-19 mortality in Hawaiʻi by approximately six months compared to the national average and contributed to the state's distinction of having the lowest age-adjusted COVID-19 death rate in the country."
Key findings
Despite these fluctuations, Hawaiʻi's overall decline in life expectancy remained less severe than the U.S. average throughout the pandemic.
Policy implications
The researchers note that Hawaiʻi's better outcomes underscore the effectiveness of early public health interventions, strong community engagement, and high vaccine uptake. They recommend that future policies build on these strengths by investing in rapid-response infrastructure and maintaining high vaccination coverage to better protect vulnerable communities during future disease outbreaks.
# # #