The chart ranks the top ten causes of death for each year. In addition to the remarkable decline in mortality overall, it’s also noticeable how heart disease and cancer have surged to become two of America’s top killers. In 1900, cancer and heart disease accounted for 18 percent of all deaths. Today, that figure’s jumped to 63 percent. In addition to being responsible for a greater share of deaths overall, the absolute number of people being killed by these chronic conditions has also grown, from 201 people out of every 100,000 in 1900 to nearly 380 per 100,000 today.
Read more. [Image: New England Journal of Medicine, via Sarah Kliff]
Hm. Interesting. - Tanya B.
About Atlantic Magazine:
“Part of the increase can be traced to our increasingly sedentary lifestyles. But we shouldn’t forget that vaccines,...
SUCK IT, CONSUMPTION. Actually, TB is still a thing. People catch it all the time, but we’re being at treating and...
What Killed Us, Then and Now The chart ranks the top ten causes of death for each year. In addition to the remarkable...
*When people say that cancer was created by humans* HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA HAHAHAHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHA No.
I REMEMBER THE DAYS WHEN WE DIDN’T LIVE LONG ENOUGH TO GET CANCER AND WE LIKED IT
Go Team Science!