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Murder knocked off list of top U.S. killers: CDC

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CHICAGO | Wed Jan 11, 2012 5:21pm EST

CHICAGO (Reuters) - A respiratory illness that strikes the elderly knocked homicide off the list of the top killers in the United States for the first time in 45 years in 2010, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Wednesday.

In its annual report on U.S. mortality, the CDC said a condition known as pneumonitis had replaced murder as a leading cause of death in the country.

The drop in deaths by homicides was expected. Last month, the FBI released a preliminary report on U.S. crime rates for 2010 that showed a 7.1 percent drop in murder between January and June, part of a wider drop in violent crime despite the country's ongoing economic troubles.

The drop in murder rates -- and a corresponding rise in pneumonitis -- forced homicide off the government's annual list of top 15 killers for the first time since the mid-1960s. Murder was relegated to 16th place in 2010 with 16,065 killings.

Average life expectancy in the United States rose slightly in 2010, to 78.7 years from 78.6 in 2009, the CDC said. In order to reach that age, Americans had to dodge a litany of potential killers, top among them heart disease and cancer.

Of the more than 2.4 million deaths the health agency studied, the top 15 killers in 2010 were:

1. Heart disease (595,444 deaths)

2. Malignant neoplasms (573,855)

3. Chronic lower respiratory diseases (137,789)

4. Cerebrovascular diseases (129,180)

5. Accidents (118.043)

6. Alzheimer's disease (83,308)

7. Diabetes (68,905)

8. Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome and nephrosis (50,472)

9. Influenza and pneumonia (50,003)

10 Suicide (37,793)

11. Septicemia (34,843)

12. Chronic liver disease and cirrhosis (31,802)

13. Essential hypertension and hypertensive renal disease (26,577)

14. Parkinson's disease (21,963)

15. Pneumonitis due to solids of liquids (17,001)

Age-adjusted death rates for nine of the 15 leading killers, including influenza and pneumonia, septicemia and cancer, fell in 2010, the CDC said. But age-adjusted death rates for six, including Parkinson's disease and pneumonitis, rose.

Age-adjustment accounts for the impact of rising life over time.

Infant mortality fell 3.9 percent in 2010 to 6.14 infant deaths per 1,000 births from 6.39 deaths per 1,000 births in 2009.

(Additional reporting by Anatara Das; Editing by Daniel Trotta)

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Comments (3)
jway87 wrote:
According to the CDC alcohol consumption is the third leading preventable cause of death in the US. The federal government is doing society a disservice by denying drinkers the right to switch to the FAR safer recreational drug, marijuana. A great deal of violence, misery and loss of life could be prevented by giving America’s alcohol consumers the right to choose the safest of these two recreational drugs.

Jan 11, 2012 5:44pm EST  --  Report as abuse
natealm wrote:
An important category of death causalities needs to be added to the 15 categories shown in the article. This category is “doctor errors- reported”. The numbers in periods around 2008 and 2009 was roughly 198,000 for each year. Those are the numbers for “reported cases”, the unreported would undoubtedly far exceed even that staggering data. And it doesn’t help if one number is that of your spouse.

One irony in this category lies is the fact that a large cause of doctor errors is blamed on failure to simply wash hands in the hospital setting. An historical note: In the early 1800s a doctor Ignaz Semmelweis, before knowledge of the germ theory was developed by Dr. Louis Pasteur , blamed his fellow doctors for causing excessive deaths because of failure to wash hands after practicing in the morgue and proceeding to the lying in hospital to assist in child birth.

Jan 11, 2012 6:17pm EST  --  Report as abuse
Toxins wrote:
It’s unfortunate that heart disease is still the #1 cause of death. Did you see The Last Heart Attack on CNN? Looks like heart disease can be not only prevented but reversed through diet: http://nutritionfacts.org/videos/our-number-one-killer-can-be-stopped/

Jan 15, 2012 6:26pm EST  --  Report as abuse
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