Health
Related: About this forumWhat do people die from in different countries? -- Our World In Data
https://ourworldindata.org/what-do-people-die-from-in-different-countriesAn interactive tool to explore causes of death by age, gender, and time, across the world.
To answer this, my colleagues Sophia Mersmann and Fiona Spooner built an interactive visualization of causes of death across the world.1 In this article, I'll give a few snapshots of how this compares across countries at different income levels.
But the real power is in exploring the tool for yourself -- you can do that for your own country at the end of this page.
Below, you can see the causes of death for the world as a whole. The total size of the visualization represents the entire 60 million global deaths, and the size of each rectangle -- each one a different cause of death -- is proportional to its share of the total. (This is called a treemap.)
Three-quarters of global deaths were caused by non-communicable diseases (NCDs), which are shown in blue. Heart disease alone accounts for one in three deaths. Cancers are almost one in five.
What did people die from in 2023?

The size of the entire visualization represents the total number of deaths globally in 2023: 60.0 million. Each rectangle within is proportional to the share of deaths due to a particular cause.
. . .
True Dough
(26,854 posts)all the deaths caused by Putin, Trump and Netanyahu, they must be rocketing up the charts.
bmbmd
(3,111 posts)As someone who has completed hundreds of death certificates over the course of my career, I've always felt that there should be a diagnosis code for "got old and just died", which is what I saw in my internal medicine practice. In our country, we are blessed to have an imperfect but sometimes serviceable system of late life health care. We keep the old folks alive in the face of serious infections, complications of falls and fractures, strokes, and assorted cardiac maladies. Most of those deaths in the elderly, when they finally occur, are attributed to cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease.
erronis
(24,012 posts)versus government or medical groups.
I worked a bit in trying to model causes of death based on hospital discharge and claims data. I think the US is amazingly deficient in not having a uniform way of reporting and collecting this type of essential data. Perhaps it has changed recently.
erronis
(24,012 posts)My father was a dynamic person who never slowed down until a couple of months before his death. He had asthma/emphysema (never smoked) but that didn't get in the way of playing tennis or vigorous walks. He did suffer from urinary tract blockage late and a botched bladder stone removal. Still kept on plugging. At some point he lost the ability to talk (probable stroke), and just gave up on trying. Was ready to die. His death certificate was COPD.
I guess it's hard to sort out the actual cause when there are so many contributors.
bmbmd
(3,111 posts)You hit it.
Bmoboy
(651 posts)Or famines or natural disasters (fires, floods, earthquakes, tornadoes, etc.)?
erronis
(24,012 posts)Obviously starvation, murder, suicides, freezing, and-so-on are huge factors.
OC375
(1,057 posts)I joke, but not really.