Cardiovascular disease, not coronavirus, is the leading cause of death worldwide

A patient has her blood pressure checked by a registered nurse. Picture: Toby Talbot/AP

A patient has her blood pressure checked by a registered nurse. Picture: Toby Talbot/AP

Published Mar 6, 2020

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London - As the new coronavirus spreads

and worldwide deaths linked to it top 3 400, global alarm is

growing and has caused everything from consumer runs on face

masks to mass school closures.

Yet while few would deny the outbreak's official status as

an international health emergency, in the ranking of top causes

of death it pales into insignificance compared to heart disease,

cancer, road accidents, suicide or homicide.

A few figures:

TOP KILLERS

The top killers are cardiovascular diseases (CVD),

everything from hypertension to strokes. They were to blame for

17.8 million deaths in 2017, roughly a third of the 56 million

total deaths recorded that year.

Cancers also loom large, accounting in total for 9.6 million

deaths. Respiratory diseases and infections together claimed 6.5

million lives.

Dementia, digestive disease and diabetes all take heavy

tolls. And despite recent progress, HIV/AIDS claimed some

942,000 lives in 2017 and malaria 620,000. Seasonal influenza

epidemics kill between 290,000 and 650,000 people a year, the

World Health Organization says.

RISK FACTORS

Viewed by risk factor, high blood pressure was linked to

10.4 million deaths in 2017; smoking to 7.1 million; high blood

sugar to 6.53 million; air pollution to 4.9 million; and obesity

to 4.7 million.

Everyday life presents other risks. Road injuries proved

fatal for 1.24 million people in 2017 - 3,400 a day.

Suicide is another big cause. Close to 800,000 people die

due to suicide every year, or one person every 40 seconds, the

WHO estimates. It cites evidence that for each adult who died by

suicide, more than 20 others may have attempted it.

There is also violence. About 464,000 people across the

world were killed in homicides in 2017, surpassing by far the

89,000 killed in armed conflicts in the same period, according

to the Global Study on Homicide 2019 published by the United

Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

* Sources: UNODC, WHO, the Global Health Data Exchange of the

Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) 

Reuters

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