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Death - Most causal causes of death |  | Death - Most causal causes of death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Most causal causes of death |  | The causes of death vary by area and by age group. In 2002 in the U.S. the top 10 causes of death were:
Heart disease: 696,947
Cancer: 557,271
Stroke: 162,672
Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 124,816
Accidents (unintentional injuries): 106,742
Diabetes: 73,249
Influenza/pneumonia: 65,681
Alzheimer's disease: 58,866
Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and ...
See also:Death, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - When is a person dead?, Death - The process of dying, Death - Cell death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - Most causal causes of death, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Personification of death, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions |  | | Death, Death - Cell death, Death - Criteria of human death: medical religious and legal, Death - Interpretations of death, Death - Most causal causes of death, Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002, Death - Personification of death, Death - Physiological changes during the process of dying, Death - Physiological consequences of human death, Death - Settlement of dead human bodies, Death - Signs of approaching death, Death - The process of dying, Death - Unwritten customs and superstitions, Death - What happens to humans after death?, Death - When death is imminent, Death - When death occurs, Death - When is a person dead?, -cide, Afterlife, Agent Smith Moment, Apoptosis, Ars moriendi ("The Art of Dying"), Autopsy, Bible and reincarnation, Brain death, Burial, Cemetery, Clinical death, Coffin, Coma, Cremation, Death (band), Death, Desire and Loss in Western Culture by Jonathan Dollimore, Death rattle, Embalming, Euthanasia, Fascination with Death (The fascination with death and the culture surrounding it), Famous last words |  | |
|  |  | Death: Encyclopedia II - Death - Most causal causes of death
Death - Most causal causes of death
The causes of death vary by area and by age group. In 2002 in the U.S. the top 10 causes of death were:
- Heart disease: 696,947
- Cancer: 557,271
- Stroke: 162,672
- Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 124,816
- Accidents (unintentional injuries): 106,742
- Diabetes: 73,249
- Influenza/pneumonia: 65,681
- Alzheimer's disease: 58,866
- Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis: 40,974
- Septicemia: 33,865
Death - Other notable causes of death in the United States 2002
- Suicide: 30,622
- Murder: 16,110
- Execution: 71
- Intentional abortion: 1,293,000
- Note that there is much debate as to when a fetus should be considered "human." The death of a human zygote — a one-celled combination of a sperm and an egg — is counted by some as the death of a human, and by others as simply the death of a cell. The above number would apparently include abortions to save the life of the mother, abortions of obviously highly defective fetuses, and abortions of fetuses unlikely to reach term.
Statistical data from U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, Death Penalty Information Center, National Right To Life, and The Alan Guttmacher Institute.
Other related archives-cide, 19th century, 20th century, ATP, Accidents, Afterlife, Agent Smith Moment, Alzheimer's disease, Angel of Death, Apoptosis, Ars moriendi, Autopsy, Bible and reincarnation, Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey, Biochemically, Biologically, Blood vessel, Brain death, Buddhism, Burial, CBF, CNS, CO2, COPD, CPR, Cancer, Castlevania, Cell reproduction, Cemetery, Charmed, Cheyne-Stokes respiration, Children of Bodom, China, Clinical death, Coffin, Coma, Cremation, Dead Like Me, Death, Death (band), Death (personification), Death Takes a Holiday, Death rattle, Death, Desire and Loss in Western Culture, Diabetes, Discworld, Día de los Muertos, Embalming, Euthanasia, Execution, Family Guy, Famous last words, Fascination with Death, Final Destination, Fingernails, Funeral, Futurama, Grim Reaper, HeLa cell, Hearse, Heart disease, Hemorrhage, Henrietta Lacks', Hepatic failure, Homo neanderthalensis, Human body disposal, ISO 3166-2 codes for Japan, Immortality, Infection, Influenza, Ingmar Bergman, Intentional abortion, Japan, Jews, Jonathan Dollimore, Karoshi, Korea, Life extension, List of faux pas, Lists of people by cause of death, Livor mortis, Louis Pasteur, Malignant, Maternal death, Meet Joe Black, Metabolic, Miyagi Prefecture, Monty Python, Mortician, Mot, Murder, Near-death experience, Neil Gaiman, Nephritis, On a Pale Horse, Oxygen, Pancreatic, Persistent vegetative state, Post Mortem Interval, Quantum immortality, Reincarnation, Renal failure, Rigor mortis, Sandman, Second Law of Thermodynamics, Septicemia, Space burial, Stroke, Suicide, Taiwan, Taj Mahal, Terminal illness, Terri Schiavo, Terry Pratchett, Thanatology, The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy, The Meaning of Life, The Seventh Seal, Tibet, Touched by an Angel, Uniform Determination Of Death Act, United States, Western culture, Yama, afterlife, age of 160, agnosticism, algor mortis, anoxia, archaeologists, atheism, autolysis, autolytic, autonomic, bacteria, birds, birds of prey, bloating, brain, brain death, brain stem, breathing, burial at sea, calcium, cardiac arrest, cardiac pacemakers, cell membranes, cells, cemetery, cetaceans, chess, church, clinical death, cloning, closed systems, coagulate, cognitive, coma, consciousness, coroner, cremation, cryonics, crypt, dead on arrival, debate, decapitation, decay, decomposition, defibrillation, dehydration, do not resuscitate, ecological burial, electroencephalograph, embalming, enzymes, evolution, faces, faux pas, feces, fetus, films, first responder, forensics, free energy, freeze-drying, funeral, funeral customs, funeral home, fungi, gases, germ cells, grave, graves, grim reaper, hair, heart, heartbeat, hell, homeostasis, immortal, incontinence, insects, knight, lactic acidosis, legal, legal Will, life, life-support, livor mortis, longevity, lungs, mammalian, mausoleum, medical, medical examiner, metabolic activity, metabolism, metals, metastasis, metonym, mortuary, mountain, mummification, mythological, neo-cortex, nephrosis, nephrotic syndrome, nerves, ochre, organism, organs, osmotic, ossuary, overlapping, pallor mortis, persistent vegetative state, person's, personality, phosphate, pneumonia, reincarnation, religion, religious, respiratory diseases, resurrection, rigor mortis, ritualised, robots, sarcophagus, scythe, sepulchre, skeletal, skin, sky burial, sleep, soul, spontaneous generation, stomach, tarot, television, telomerases, telomeres, tissue culture, tissues, tomb, transplantation, tumors, undertaker, underworld, unusual personification, urine, vampires, vasodilation, zygote, °F
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Most causal causes of death", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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