Accidental Deaths Reach A Record High In The US
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Americans are dying by accident — largely because of drug overdoses.
A
National Safety Council report shows the number of accidental deaths hit a record high in 2014, the most recent year data was available.
But it's a number that's been on the rise over the past decade.
Accidental deaths are now the fourth-highest cause of death, falling behind heart disease, cancer and chronic respiratory disease.
NSC statistics manager Ken
Kolosh said: "
It's all preventable. Every accident is preventable. But it's not necessarily the [fault] of the victim."
He added, "Every individual has the opportunity to make choices to keep themselves safe."
Americans' rising use of opioids — including heroin — has become a national issue highlighted in other recent reports.
The
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention said deaths from opioid and heroin use rose 14 percent from
2013 to 2014 and have nearly tripled since
2010.
As for the NSC report, it also showed deaths from accidents like falling have more than tripled in the past couple of decades.
An increasing elderly population from the baby boomer generation is likely the reason for this uptick.
But other types of accidental deaths, like those caused by traffic crashes, are actually down.
Better technology has made cars increasingly safer, although drunk driving is still a big concern.
Texting while driving poses another traffic safety concern, although there's currently little reliable data about how this affects accident rates.
The NSC notes that the leading cause of accidental death varies by age group. For infants younger than 1 year old, suffocation is the leading cause, while drowning tops the list for children ages 1-4 years old.
Vehicle crashes are the leading category for ages 5-24. Poisonings and drug overdoses are the highest category for those in their mid-20s through mid-60s, and falls are the
No. 1 cause of accidental death for those 65 and older.
This video includes clips from National Safety Council and images from
Getty Images, Nephron /
CC BY SA 3.0 and Itayba / CC BY SA 3.0.
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