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Interactive tool · CDC NCHS · 2017

Cause-of-death lookup

Pick any of the ten leading causes and rank all 50 states and DC by its age-adjusted rate per 100,000, drawn live from the complete 9,690-record CDC WONDER grid (1999–2017).

10
Leading causes
51
States + DC
9,690
Records
2017
Latest year

Result · Heart disease

Oklahoma has the highest age-adjusted heart disease death rate at 237.2/100K - 2.0× Minnesota, the lowest at 119.1. Across all 51 jurisdictions, heart disease accounted for 647,457 deaths in 2017.

237.2
Oklahoma - highest /100K
119.1
Minnesota - lowest /100K
166.0
average across states
2.0×
highest vs lowest gap

Source: CDC NCHS Leading Causes of Death, 2017.

Heart disease rate distribution across 51 states, 2017

Where states cluster, the marker shows the national average

166.0 Lower than 61% lower than 61% of 51 states

119.0–134.0: 3 states (6%). Below this entry. 134.0–149.0: 11 states (22%). Below this entry. 149.0–164.0: 16 states (31%). Below this entry. 164.0–179.0: 7 states (14%). This entry sits in this band. 179.0–194.0: 5 states (10%). Above this entry. 194.0–209.0: 4 states (8%). Above this entry. 209.0–224.0: 3 states (6%). Above this entry. 224.0–239.0: 2 states (4%). Above this entry. US avg 119.0 239.0 every US state, bucketed by value

Each bar is a band; taller bars hold more states. The dashed line + filled bar mark this entry. Hover or tap any bar for its full count, share, and where it sits relative to this entry.

Source CDC NCHS Leading Causes of Death · 2017

Heart disease death rates by state, 2017

# State Age-adj rate /100KDeaths
1 Oklahoma 237.2 10,772
2 Mississippi 231.6 7,944
3 Arkansas 223.8 8,270
4 Alabama 223.2 13,110
5 Louisiana 214.4 11,260
6 Tennessee 202.2 16,019
7 Nevada 199.3 6,417
8 Michigan 196.1 25,187
9 Kentucky 195.9 10,343
10 West Virginia 192.0 4,849
11 Missouri 191.1 14,820
12 District of Columbia 189.8 1,284
13 Ohio 186.2 28,008
14 Indiana 183.2 14,445
15 Pennsylvania 176.0 32,312
16 Georgia 175.8 18,389
17 South Carolina 172.0 10,418
18 New York 171.2 44,092
19 Texas 169.2 45,346
20 Iowa 167.4 7,180
21 Maryland 164.5 11,653
22 Illinois 163.3 25,394
23 Idaho 162.5 3,084
24 New Jersey 162.3 18,840
25 Delaware 158.4 1,990
26 Kansas 158.0 5,723
27 Wisconsin 157.6 11,860
28 North Carolina 156.5 18,808
29 Rhode Island 155.7 2,339
30 Montana 155.0 2,164
31 Virginia 154.5 14,861
32 Vermont 152.5 1,332
33 New Mexico 151.4 3,896
34 Utah 150.2 3,749
35 South Dakota 150.1 1,710
36 New Hampshire 149.7 2,721
37 Nebraska 149.3 3,581
38 Wyoming 148.9 1,001
39 Florida 145.8 46,440
40 Maine 143.5 2,844
41 California 142.9 62,797
42 Arizona 141.9 12,398
43 Connecticut 141.6 7,138
44 Washington 138.8 11,582
45 North Dakota 137.8 1,326
46 Alaska 135.0 814
47 Massachusetts 134.7 12,140
48 Oregon 134.0 6,942
49 Hawaii 129.8 2,575
50 Colorado 122.7 7,060
51 Minnesota 119.1 8,230

Source: CDC NCHS Leading Causes of Death, 2017. Methodology.

Explore more

How should I read this lookup?

What does the age-adjusted rate mean?

It is deaths per 100,000 people, standardized to the year 2000 US population so states with older or younger populations can be compared fairly. The CDC uses the same standard.

Why do some states rank so much higher than others?

Cause-specific death rates reflect differences in risk factors, healthcare access, and prevention. Southern and rural states tend to rank higher for heart disease and several chronic causes; the gap between the highest and lowest state is often 2x or more.

What year is this data from?

This tool uses 2017, the latest year of finalized CDC NCHS Leading Causes of Death data, which runs 1999 to 2017.