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As to the increase in the male population, demographers cited greater incidences of lung cancer and job-related stress factors such as alcoholism among women. They noted a shift first seen in 1990, as women increasingly worked outside the home and after their smoking rates hit a peak in the late 1960s. Recent immigration also played a role as male laborers from Mexico entered the U.S. in search of jobs. The District of Columbia, Rhode Island, Maryland, Massachusetts and New York had the largest shares of women. On the other end of the scale, Alaska, Wyoming, North Dakota and Nevada had higher male proportions, due partly to mining or construction industries that drew new workers. Mark Mather, an associate vice president of the Population Reference Bureau, noted that the changing gender ratios already are having a social impact. For instance, the share of women ages 65 to 74 who are widowed dropped last year to 24 percent from 44 percent in 1960. The share of older people living alone who are female also declined, to 71 percent from 75 percent in 2000. "If current trends continue, men's life expectancy will approach that of women in the next few decades, creating more of a gender balance in the oldest age groups," he said. "This has wide implications for family relationships in old age and caretaking, with more potential partners for older women." Other findings: Mexicans increased by 11.2 million to make up 63 percent of all Hispanics in the U.S., up 4.5 percentage points from 2000. They were the fastest-growing Hispanic subgroup, adding to their shares in all but three states (New Hampshire, Georgia and North Carolina). Arizona now has the third-largest Mexican population, behind California and Texas, after surpassing Illinois. Seven states now have a median age of 40 or older. Maine has the oldest residents at 42.7 years, followed by Vermont, West Virginia, New Hampshire, Florida, Pennsylvania and Connecticut. Utah was youngest, with a median age of 29.2. Roughly 1,679 U.S. counties, or more than half, had median ages over 40; that's compared with 733, or less than one-fourth of counties, in 2000. The share of U.S. households with married couples fell to 48.4 percent, down from 51.7 percent in 2000. It was the first time the number dropped below 50 percent. In 1950, married couples made up 77 percent of households. Eighteen states last year showed declines in married couple households, while 41 states had drops in households containing married couples with children. People from India were the fastest-growing Asian subgroup, adding 1.2 million to make up 19.4 percent of all Asians. That's up 3 percentage points from 2000, although they still trailed Chinese, who have a 22.8 percent share. Virginia moved past Pennsylvania, Maryland and Michigan to post the seventh-largest Indian population, after California, New York, New Jersey, Texas, Illinois and Florida. ___ Online:
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