The Odds of Dying

tornado lightning disaster
Cataclysmic storms took the lives of about 60 people and lightning killed 25 people in the United States in 2014.
(Image credit: Solarseven | Shutterstock.com)

Everyone dies of something, but after slogging through the daily news, you'd think most people die from terrorism, shark attacks and gas explosions. But are these tragedies — not to mention deaths from lightning strikes, plane crashes and tsunamis — actually top killers in the United States?

Not really.

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Cause of deathNumber of U.S. deathsRate of deaths
1. Cardiovascular disease614,348193 per 100,000
2. Cancer591,699186 per 100,000
3. Chronic lower respiratory disease147,10146 per 100,000
4. Accidents136,05343 per 100,000
5. Strokes133,10342 per 100,000
6. Alzheimer's disease93,54129 per 100,000
7. Diabetes76,48824 per 100,000
8. Influenza and pneumonia55,22717 per 100,000
Drug overdoses47,05515 per 100,000
Kidney disease48,14615 per 100,000
Intentional self-harm42,77313 per 100,000
Septicemia38,94012 per 100,000
Liver disease38,17012 per 100,000
Transportation accidents37,19512 per 100,000
Parkinson's disease26,1508 per 100,000
Firearm assault10,9453 per 100,000
HIV6,7212 per 100,000
Pedestrian deaths6,2582 per 100,000
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Cause of DeathNumber of U.S. deaths in 2014 (total deaths = 2.6 million)
Dengue fever2
Venomous snakes or lizards5
Nonvenomous insects6
Venomous spiders7
Malaria8
Nonpowered aircraft (Ex: hot air balloons, hang gliders)13
Lightning25
Struck or bitten by dog36
Salmonella infection45
Cataclysmic storm61
Mauled by a mammal (not including dogs)83
Avalanche, landslide or other Earth movement85
Contact with venomous plants or animals (Ex: bees, scorpions)91
Explosions (including gas)116
Laura Geggel
Managing Editor

Laura is the managing editor at Live Science. She also runs the archaeology section and the Life's Little Mysteries series. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, Scholastic, Popular Science and Spectrum, a site on autism research. She has won multiple awards from the Society of Professional Journalists and the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association for her reporting at a weekly newspaper near Seattle. Laura holds a bachelor's degree in English literature and psychology from Washington University in St. Louis and a master's degree in science writing from NYU.