U.S. - Mexico Border Area Mortality

Underlying Cause of Death 1999-2018

Summary:

  

The U.S. - Mexico Border Area Underlying Cause of Death data available on WONDER are county-level national mortality and population data spanning the years 1999-2018. Data are based on death certificates for U.S. residents. Each death certificate identifies a single underlying cause of death and demographic data. The number of deaths, crude death rates or age-adjusted death rates, and 95% confidence intervals and standard errors for death rates can be obtained by place of residence (total U.S., region, state and county), age group (single-year-of age, 5-year age groups, 10-year age groups and infant age groups), race, Hispanic ethnicity, gender, year, cause-of-death (4-digit ICD-10 code or group of codes), injury intent and injury mechanism, drug/alcohol induced causes and urbanization categories. Data are also available for the place of death, month and weekday of death, and whether an autopsy was performed. In addition, to complement the U.S. regions, two supplementary regions within the United States are available: 1) U.S. - Mexico Border Region (i.e., counties within 100 kilometers of the U.S. - Mexico border), and 2) the U.S. Non-Border Region with the remaining counties. The four "Border State Areas" for Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas are comprised of the counties for each state which fall within 100 kilometers (62 miles) of the border, based on the La Paz Agreement. Statistics are also available by each border county along the U.S. - Mexico border.

Privacy policy: As of May 23, 2011, all sub-national data representing zero to nine (0-9) deaths or births are suppressed. Corresponding sub-national denominator population figures are also suppressed when the population represents fewer than ten persons. As of December 12, 2011, additional privacy constraints apply to infant mortality statistics for infant age groups and live births denominator population figures. See Assurance of Confidentiality for more information.

Mortality data:

  

The mortality data are based on information from all death certificates filed in the fifty states and the District of Columbia. Deaths of nonresidents (e.g. nonresident aliens, nationals living abroad, residents of Puerto Rico, Guam, the Virgin Islands, and other territories of the U.S.) and fetal deaths are excluded. Mortality data from the death certificates are coded by the states and provided to NCHS through the Vital Statistics Cooperative Program or coded by NCHS from copies of the original death certificates provided to NCHS by the State registration offices. For more information, see Technical Appendix from Vital Statistics of United States: 1999 Mortality.

  • About suppressed data and unreliable rates:
    • Sub-national data representing fewer than ten persons (0-9) are suppressed for year 1989 and later years. See Assurance of Confidentiality for more information.
    • Rates are marked as "unreliable" when the death count is less than 20.
  • About cause of death classification: 
    • The underlying cause-of-death is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as "the disease or injury which initiated the train of events leading directly to death, or the circumstances of the accident or violence which produced the fatal injury." Underlying cause-of-death is selected from the conditions entered by the physician on the cause of death section of the death certificate. When more than one cause or condition is entered by the physician, the underlying cause is determined by the sequence of conditions on the certificate, provisions of the ICD, and associated selection rules and modifications.
    • Causes of death are classified in accordance with the International Classification of Disease. Deaths for 1979-98 are classified using the Ninth Revision (ICD-9). Deaths for 1999 and beyond are classified using the Tenth Revision (ICD-10).
    • Beginning with data for 2006, the valid ICD-10 codes used to classify causes of death changed. Effective with the 2006 data year, 18 codes were introduced as valid causes of death, and 4 codes were discontinued. Effective with the 2007 data year, 4 codes were introduced as valid causes of death, and 2 codes were discontinued. See ICD-10 Changes for more information.
    • Beginning with data for 2001, NCHS introduced categories *U01-*U03 for classifying and coding deaths due to acts of terrorism. The asterisks before the category codes indicate that they are not part of the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10). Description of the specific 4-digit codes can be found at NCHS Classifications of Diseases, and Functioning & Disability: Appendix I. Deaths classified to the terrorism categories are included in the categories for Assault (homicide) and Intentional self-harm (suicide) in the 113 cause-of-death list. Additional information on these new categories can be found at NCHS Classifications of Diseases, and Functioning & Disability: Classification of Death and Injury Resulting from Terrorism.
  • About race and ethnicity reporting: 
    • Race and Hispanic origin are reported separately on the death certificate in accordance with standards set forth by the Office of Management and Budget. The American Indian or Alaska Native race category includes: North, Central, and South American Indians, Eskimos, and Aleuts. The Asian or Pacific Islander race category includes Chinese, Filipino, Hawaiian, Japanese, and Other Asian or Pacific Islanders.
    • Hispanic origin was not reported on the death certificate for some deaths. On the mortality file, missing Hispanic origin information is coded as "not stated". There is no corresponding population figure for this group. Therefore, deaths with Hispanic origin not stated are excluded when death rates are calculated by Hispanic origin.
    • Information included on the death certificate about the race and Hispanic ethnicity of the decedent is reported by the funeral director as provided by an informant, often the surviving next of kin, or, in the absence of an informant, on the basis of observation. Race and ethnicity information from the census is by self-report. To the extent that race and Hispanic origin are inconsistent between these two data sources, death rates will be biased. Studies have shown that persons self-reported as American Indian, Asian, or Hispanic on census and survey records may sometimes be reported as white or non-Hispanic on the death certificate, resulting in an underestimation of deaths and death rates for the American Indian, Asian, and Hispanic groups. Bias also results from undercounts of some population groups in the census, particularly young black males, young white males, and elderly persons, resulting in an overestimation of death rates. In " Quality of death rates by race and Hispanic origin:  A summary of current research, 1999," the authors estimate that the misclassification and under-coverage result in overstated death rates for the white and black populations (1% and 5%, respectively) and understated death rates for other population groups (American Indians, 21%; Asian or Pacific Islanders, 11%; and Hispanics, 2%). See also The validity of race and Hispanic Origin reporting on death certificates in the United States.
    • For 1979-2002, all 50 States and the District of Columbia collected race data on the death certificates using four single-race categories (American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian or Pacific Islander, Black, and White) in accordance with the 1977 OMB standards, allowing only a single race to be reported. Beginning with the 2003 data year, some States began collecting race data in accordance with the 1997 OMB standards, allowing one or more of five race categories to be reported. In order to provide uniformity and comparability of mortality data during the transition from the single-race format to the multiple-race format, NCHS is "bridging" the race responses of those for whom more than one race is reported (multiple race) to one of the single-race categories. The bridging procedure is similar to the procedure used to bridge multiple-race population estimates. Multiple-race decedents are imputed to a single race (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, or Asian or Pacific Islander) according to their combination of races, Hispanic origin, sex, and age indicated on the death certificate. The imputation procedure is described in detail at NCHS Procedures for Multiple-Race and Hispanic Origin Data.
    • For more discussion of race and ethnicity data, see Race and Ethnicity Questions.
  • About "Not Stated" age or ethnicity:
    • Deaths of persons with Age "Not Stated" are included in "All" counts and rates, but are not distributed among age groups, so are not included in age-specific counts, age-specific rates or in any age-adjusted rates.
    • Data for the "Not Stated" age category or the "Not Stated" Hispanic Origin category cannot be combined with any other specified age group or Hispanic Origin categories.
    • Death rates are not calculated specifically for the "Not Stated" groups because there are no corresponding population denominator data for these groups.

Population data:

  

The population estimates are U.S. Census Bureau estimates of U.S. national, state, and county resident populations. The year 1999 population estimates are bridged-race intercensal estimates of the July 1 resident population, based on the year 1990 and the year 2000 census counts. The year 2000 and year 2010 population estimates are April 1 modified census counts, with bridged-race categories. The 2001 - 2009 population estimates are bridged-race revised intercensal estimates of the July 1 resident population, based on the year 2000 and the year 2010 census counts (released by NCHS on 10/26/2012). The 2001 - 2009 archive population estimates are bridged-race postcensal estimates of the July 1 resident population. The 2011 - 2018 population estimates are bridged-race postcensal estimates of the July 1 resident population. For more information, see Population Data Sources.

NCHS live-birth data are included for "Infant Age Groups" so that infant mortality rates can be calculated. The number of live births and the population estimate for the "under one year of age" group differ slightly, thus death rates may differ slightly when compared. For more information, see Mortality for Infants.

Source:

  

The Underlying Cause of Death data are produced by the Mortality Statistics Branch, Division of Vital Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), United States Department of Health and Human Services (U.S. DHHS). See Data Source Information.

In WONDER:    You can produce tables, maps, charts, and data extracts. Obtain death counts, crude death rates, age-adjusted rates, 95% confidence intervals and standard errors for rates, and percentage of total. Select specific disease and demographic criteria to produce cross-tabulated mortality measures. Data are organized into three levels of geographic detail: national, state (including multi-state regions and divisions) and county. The population estimates used as the denominator for rate calculations are also shown. You can limit and index your data by any and all of the variables.
Contents:    Underlying Cause of Death Data Request
Data Source Information
Additional Information

Underlying Cause of Death Data Request

Output:    You can produce tables, maps, charts, and data extracts. Obtain death counts, crude death rates, age-adjusted rates, 95% confidence intervals and standard errors for rates, and percentage of total. Select specific disease and demographic criteria to produce cross-tabulated mortality measures. Data are organized into three levels of geographic detail: national, state (including multi-state regions and divisions) and county. The population estimates used as the denominator for rate calculations are also shown.
Variables:    You can limit and index your data by any and all of these variables:
  1. Location: U.S. - Mexico Border Regions, HHS Regions, Census Regions and Divisions, State, County
  2. Age Groups: 10 year age groups, 5 year age groups, single-year age groups and infant age groups
  3. Race: American Indian or Alaskan Native, Asian / Pacific Islander, Black or African American, White
  4. Hispanic Origin: Hispanic or Latino, Not Hispanic or Latino, Not stated
  5. Gender (Sex): Female, Male
  6. Year of death: 1999-2018
  7. Month of death: January through December
  8. Weekday of death: Sunday through Saturday, Unknown
  9. Autopsy performed: No, Yes, Unknown
  10. Place of Death: Medical Facility - Inpatient, Medical Facility - Outpatient or ER, Medical Facility - Dead on Arrival, Medical Facility - Status Unknown (years 1999-2002 only), Decedent's home, Hospice Facility (years 2003 and later only), Nursing home/long term care, Other, Place of death unknown
  11. Cause of Death: underlying cause of death - ICD-10 codes, Drug/Alcohol Induced Causes, Injury Intent and Mechanism groups, 113 Selected Causes, 130 Selected Causes (for infants), 15 Leading Causes
  12. Urbanization: classifies population density and other factors at the county level - pick between the 2006 or the 2013 NCHS Urban-Rural Classification Scheme for Counties
How?    The Request screen has sections to guide you through the making a data request as step-by-step process. However, to get your first taste of how the system works, you might want to simply press any Send button, and execute the default data request. The data results for your query appear on the Table screen. After you get your data results, try the Chart and Map screens. Or export your data to a file (tab-delimited line listing) for download to your computer.
For more information, see the following:
Quick Start Guide
Step 1, Organize table layout
Step 2, Select location
Step 3, Select demographics
Step 4, Select year and month
Step 5, Select weekday, autopsy and place of death
Step 6, Select cause of death
Step 7, Other options
'By-Variables'    Select variables that serve as keys (indexes) for organizing your data. See "How do I organize my data?" for more information.
Note:   To map your data, you must select at least one geographical location as a "By-Variable" for grouping your data, such as State or County.
Help:    Click on any button labeled "Help", located to the right hand side of the screen at the top of each section. Each control's label, such as the "Location" label next to the Location entry box, is linked to the on-line help for that item.
Send:    Sends your data request to be processed on the CDC WONDER databases. The Send buttons are located on the bottom of the Request page, and also in the upper right corner of each section, for easy access.


Step 1. Organize table layout:
Group Results By:    Select up to five variables that serve as keys for grouping your data. See Group Results By below for hints.
Measures:    If checked, these measures will appear in the results table. Click "+" to select Additional Rate Options, such as archive populations, and selecting the populations for weighting age-adjusted rates.
Title:    Enter any desired description to display as a title with your results.
Additional Rate Options:    Click the "+" to open this section, and select more measures for rates. The options vary, depending on your selections in the Measures section above. For example, when you check Age-Adjusted Rates in the Measures section, then you can choose a standard population for weighting the age-adjusted rates, or you can select criteria to define a non-standard population for weights, in the Additional Rate Options section. For more information, see Additional Rate Options

Group Results By...

Select up to five variables that serve as keys for grouping your data. For example, you could select to group (summarize, stratify, index) your data by State and by County.

How?    See "How do I organize my data?" for more information.

Hints:   

  1. About age-adjusted rates:
    When age-adjusted rates are calculated, you cannot group the data by Age Group.
  2. About charts:
    You cannot make charts when your data has more than two By-Variables.
  3. About maps:
    To make a map, you must request data with a geographic location variable, such as State or County, as a "By-Variable." Then click the Map tab.

Death Counts

The death counts in the data represent deaths that occurred in the 50 United States and the district of Columbia, for the legal place of residence of the decedent. See Mortality data for more information.

Notes:  Death counts are suppressed for sub-national data representing zero to nine (0-9) deaths. See Assurance of Confidentiality for more information.


Crude Rates

Crude Rates are expressed as the number of deaths reported each calendar year per the factor you select. The default factor is per 100,000 population, reporting the death rate per 100,000 persons.

Crude Rate = Count / Population * 100,000

See Frequently Asked Questions about Death Rates .

Hints:
  • Rates calculated with population estimates are per 100,000 persons by default. However, infant mortality rates are calculated per 1,000 live births by default. See Additional Rate Options to select the factor for rate calculations.
  • Select the precision for rate calculations in the Other Options section. When the rate calculated for a small numerator (incidence count) is zero, you may increase the precision to reveal the rate by showing more numbers to the right of the decimal point.
Notes:
  • Rates for small populations should be interpreted with caution.
  • Rates are suppressed for sub-national data representing zero to nine (0-9) deaths. Corresponding sub-national denominator population figures are also suppressed when the population represents fewer than 10 persons. See Assurance of Confidentiality for more information.
  • Rates are marked as "unreliable" when the death count is less than 20.
  • Rates are marked as "not applicable" when the population denominator figure is unavailable, such as persons of "not stated" or unknown age or Hispanic origin.
  • Crude rates are helpful in determining the need for services for a given population, relative to another population, regardless of size. Crude rates are influenced by the underlying age distribution of the state's population. Even if two states have the same age-adjusted rates, the state with the relatively older population (as demonstrated by having a higher median age) will have higher crude rates because incidence or death rates for most cancers increase with increasing age.
  • The population estimates for the denominators of incidence rates are race-specific and sex-specific population estimates. The population estimates are aggregated from the most detailed level selected. For example, if you have requested data for the nation grouped by state and by county, then the populations are the county-level population estimates aggregated to the state and national summaries. See Population Denominator Data Sources below for more information.
  • The population for "Infant age groups" is the number of live births in the given time period. See Infant Mortality for more information.

Age-Adjusted Rates

Age-adjusted death rates are weighted averages of the age-specific death rates, where the weights represent a fixed population by age. They are used to compare relative mortality risk among groups and over time. An age-adjusted rate represents the rate that would have existed had the age-specific rates of the particular year prevailed in a population whose age distribution was the same as that of the fixed population. Age-adjusted rates should be viewed as relative indexes rather than as direct or actual measures of mortality risk.

The year "2000 U.S. standard" is the default population selection for the calculation of age-adjusted rates. However, you can select other standard populations, or select specific population criteria to determine the age distribution ratios. See Frequently Asked Questions about Death Rates for more information.

The rates of almost all causes of death vary by age. Age adjustment is a technique for "removing" the effects of age from crude rates, so as to allow meaningful comparisons across populations with different underlying age structures. For example, comparing the crude rate of heart disease in Florida to that of California is misleading, because the relatively older population in Florida will lead to a higher crude death rate, even if the age-specific rates of heart disease in Florida and California are the same. For such a comparison, age-adjusted rates are preferable. Age-adjusted rates should be viewed as relative indexes rather than as direct or actual measures of mortality risk.

The National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) age-adjusts death rates using the direct method. That is, by applying age-specific death rates (Ri) to the U.S. standard population age distribution.

R' = S i ( Psi / Ps ) R i

where Psi is the standard population for age group i and Ps is the total U.S. standard population (all ages combined).

In the direct method, a standard age distribution is chosen and the age-specific death rates are weighted according to the standard. A reasonable choice for the standard is the U.S. total population (all races, both genders) for the year under study. To permit comparison of death rates from year to year, a standard population is used. Beginning with the 1999 data year, NCHS adopted the year 2000 projected population of the United States as the standard population. This new standard replaces the 1940 standard population that was used by NCHS for over 50 years. The new population standard affects the level of mortality and to some extent trends and group comparisons. Of particular note are the effects on race comparison of mortality. For detailed discussion, see:

Anderson RN, Rosenberg HM. Age standardization of death rates: Implementation of the year 2000 standard. National Vital Statistics Reports; vol 47 no 3. Hyattsville, Maryland. National Center for Health Statistics. 1998.

Beginning with publications of the year 2003 data, the traditional standard million population along with corresponding standard weights to six decimal places were replaced by the projected year 2000 population age distribution (see 2000 Standard Population below). The effect of the change is negligible and does not significantly affect comparability with age-adjusted rates calculated using the previous method.

Age-Adjusted Rates Hints:

  • Age-Adjusted Rates are optional; see Measures in Step 1 and Additional Rate Options .
  • Rates are calculated per 100,000 population by default. See Additional Rate Options to select the factor for rate calculations.
  • Select the precision for rate calculations in the Other Options section. You can also change precision in the Results tab, using Table Options. When the rate calculated for a small numerator (incidence count) is zero, you may increase the precision to reveal the rate by showing more numbers to the right of the decimal point.
  • Age-adjusted rates cannot be calculated when the data are grouped by Age Group.
  • Age-adjusted rates are not calculated when only one age group is selected (the effect is a ratio of one).
  • Age-adjusted rates are not available for "Infant age groups" because the populations for these age groups are the number of live births in the given time period, the same population denominator for each infant age group.
  • Standard age-adjusted rates (calculated with standard populations) are only available for Ten-Year Age Groups.

Notes:


Year 2000 Standard Population for the United States
 
   Age Number
 All ages 274,633,642
 Under 1 year 3,794,901
 1-4 years 15,191,619
 5-14 years 39,976,619
 15-24 years 38,076,743
 25-34 years 37,233,437
 35-44 years 44,659,185
 45-54 years 37,030,152
 55-64 years 23,961,506
 65-74 years 18,135,514
 75-84 years 12,314,793
 85 years and over4,259,173

      *  Based on year 2000 projected population.

Year 2000 Standard Million Population for the United States
Numbers and All Ages Proportions (Weights) *
 
   Age Number Weight
 All ages 1,000,000 1.000000
 Under 1 year 13,818 0.013818
 1-4 years 55,317 0.055317
 5-14 years 145,565 0.145565
 15-24 years 138,646 0.138646
 25-34 years 135,573 0.135573
 35-44 years 162,613 0.162613
 45-54 years 134,834 0.134834
 55-64 years 87,247 0.087247
 65-74 years 66,037 0.066037
 75-84 years 44,842 0.044842
 85 years and over 15,508 0.015508

      *  Based on year 2000 projected population.
Note that these weights only apply to the all ages population,
the weights are calculated dynamically when age groups are selected.

Year 1970 Standard Million Population for the United States
Numbers and All Ages Proportions (Weights) *
 
   Age Number Weight
 All ages 1,000,000 1.000000
 Under 1 year 18,102 0.018102
 1-4 years 66,314 0.066314
 5-14 years 200,508 0.200508
 15-24 years 174,406 0.174406
 25-34 years 122,569 0.122569
 35-44 years 113,614 0.113614
 45-54 years 114,265 0.114265
 55-64 years 91,480 0.091480
 65-74 years 61,195 0.061195
 75-84 years 30,112 0.030112
 85 years and over 7,435 0.007435

      *  Based on the year 1970 population.
Note that these weights only apply to the all ages population,
the weights are calculated dynamically when age groups are selected.

Year 1940 Standard Million Population for the United States
Numbers and All Ages Proportions (Weights) *
 
   Age Number Weight
 All ages 1,000,000 1.000000
 Under 1 year 15,343 0.015343
 1-4 years 64,718 0.064718
 5-14 years 170,355 0.170355
 15-24 years 181,677 0.181677
 25-34 years 162,066 0.162166
 35-44 years 139,237 0.139237
 45-54 years 117,811 0.117811
 55-64 years 80,294 0.080294
 65-74 years 48,426 0.048426
 75-84 years 17,303 0.017303
 85 years and over 2,770 0.002770

      *  Based on the year 1940 population.
Note that these weights only apply to the all ages population,
the weights are calculated dynamically when age groups are selected.

95% Confidence Intervals for Rates

You can request 95% confidence intervals calculated for death rates. The method for confidence intervals calculated for 100 or more deaths differs slightly from the method for confidence intervals calculated for 99 or fewer deaths.

How? Click the check box to indicate the desired measure.

Notes:

  • The method for confidence intervals calculated for 100 or more deaths:
    The lower 95% confidence interval is the crude death rate minus (1.96 times the standard error of the rate). The upper 95% confidence interval is the crude death rate plus (1.96 times the standard error of the rate). LCI = R - 1.96 * S (R)
    UCI = R + 1.96 * S (R)
  • The method for confidence intervals calculated for 99 or fewer deaths:
    The lower 95% confidence interval is the crude death multiplied by the lower 95% confidence limit factor for a death rate based on a Poisson variable of the number of deaths. The upper 95% confidence interval is the crude death rate multiplied by the upper 95% confidence limit factor for a death rate based on a Poisson variable of the number of deaths. See Vital Statistics of the United States: Mortality, 1999: Technical Appendix Table S. LCI = R * L (0.95, D)
    UCI = R * U (0.95, D)
  • Where:
  • For more information, refer to


Standard Errors for Rates

You can request standard errors calculated for death rates.

How? Click the check box to indicate the desired measure.

Notes:



Additional Rate Options:

Click the "+" to open this section. The options shown here vary, depending on the Measures you checked in section 1. Organize table layout on the Data Request tab. For example, to pick populations for weighting age-adjusted rates here, you must first check the box for age-adjusted rates in the Measures section.

Calculate Rates Per:    Select the factor (multiplier) for your rates. By default, all ages rates are calculated per 100,000 persons, and rates limited to infant age groups are calculated per 1,000 persons.

How? See How do I select items from the list box?

Archive Rates:    Check the box if you wish to reproduce archive rates and population figures from the preceding release of these data. See Comparison with Other Releases for more information.

How? See "How do I use a checkbox?"

Include age-adjusted rates?    Crude rates are reported by default. Indicate that you wish to calculate age-adjusted rates by clicking the checkbox under Measures in section 1. Organize table layout on the Data Request tab. Then choose the standard population to use for the ratios in the calculation. For more information, see:
Age-Adjusted Rates and
Frequently Asked Questions about Death Rates.

How? See How do I use a radio button?

Notes on Age-Adjusted Rates:

  • Group your data by any variable, except for Age Groups. You are prevented from grouping the data by age groups when requesting age-adjusted rates for mortality data, because any single age group alone yields a corresponding weight of 1.
  • Likewise, you must select more than 1 age group when requesting age-adjusted rates for mortality data.
  • Deaths coded to the "unknown" age groups do not yield a proportional weight, as there is no corresponding population value.
  • Select the combined age group for all persons less than 1 year of age. Age-adjusted rates are not available for deaths codes to the specific Infant Age Groups, because the representative population value for each infant age group is the (same) number of live births in selected time period.
Populations for Age-Adjusted Rates:    If you picked standard age-adjusted rates, then the list of possible standard populations used to calculate these age-adjusted rates is shown. See Age-Adjusted Rates for more information.

How? See How do I select items from the list box?

Note: The standard populations do not include representations of all age groups included in the mortality data. Your request criteria must combine data for the following ranges of ages: "5 - 14 years" combined and "15 - 24 years" combined.

Non-standard Age-Adjusted Rates:    If you picked non-standard age-adjusted rates, then options for selecting possible actual population criteria are shown. The actual population values for the specified year, race and location selections provide the age-specific proportional weights that calculate these age-adjusted rates. See Frequently Asked Questions about Death Rates for more information.

How?

  • See How do I select items from the list box?
  • Type the desired Location code value into the box, one code per line. Or leave the box empty for the entire United States (national population). Any region, division, state or county code shown in the Finder at Step 2 is valid.
Note: If the same population is picked for your query criteria and your non-standard age-adjusted rate calculations, then the crude rates and age-adjusted rates are identical for those data rows that represent the non-standard population denominator.


Step 2. Select location:

Select the place(s) of interest. Location describes geographic areas in the United States by
  1. Regions for multi-state areas such as the U.S. - Mexico Border Regions;
  2. State and County; and also
  3. Urbanization classifies population density and other factors at the county level - choose between the 2013 or the 2006 NCHS Urban-Rural Classification Scheme for Counties.

Location

Data are available for the United States by Region (U.S - Mexico Border Regions, Census Regions, or Health and Human Services (HHS) Regions), State and County, as well as by Urbanization categories for counties. Select the location(s) for the query. Any number of locations can be specified here.

How? Hints:
  • The default is all values (the United States).
  • The Advanced mode let you easily pick several items from different parts of the list. Items are not selected until you click the "Move" button in Advanced mode. You may also enter values by hand, one code per line, in the Advanced mode. Use the Finder to see the correct code format. For example, 02 is the Alaska state code.
  • The "plus" symbol, "+" indicates that you can open the item, to see more items below it.
  • The results to a search are shown in blue, and indicated by ">".


Region

Regions are multi-state groups. For regional data, you can group by Region, or you can select any combination of individual regions. There are three types of regions available:

  1. U.S. - Mexico Border Regions;
  2. Census Regions;
  3. Health and Human Services (HHS) Regions.
    How?   Notes:  
    • Region is based on the person's legal state of residence at the time of death.
    • The Regions are identified by both name and codes in data extracts.


    U.S. - Mexico Border Regions

    The United States is split into two U.S. - Mexico Border Regions: U.S. - Mexico Border Region with counties within 100 kilometers of the U.S. - Mexico border, and the U.S. Non-Border Region with the remaining counties. The areas that comprise the U.S. - Mexico Border Region are shown below. Each of the "Border State Areas" for Arizona, California, New Mexico and Texas are comprised of the counties listed below, which fall within 100 kilometers (62 miles) of the border, based on the La Paz Agreement.

    How?   Notes:  
    • Region is based on the person's legal state of residence at the time of death.
    • The Regions are identified by both name and codes in data extracts.

    U.S. - Mexico Border Regions
    Area Name and Code
    
    U.S. - Mexico Border Region  	UMB01
    
      Arizona Border Area		UMB03
         Cochise County, AZ		04003
         Pima County, AZ		04019 
         Santa Cruz County, AZ	04023
         Yuma County, AZ		04027
    
      California Border Area	UMB05 
         Imperial County, CA	06025
         San Diego County, CA	06073
    
      New Mexico Border Area	UMB07
         Dona Ana County, NM	35013 
         Grant County, NM		35017
         Hidalgo County, NM    	35023
         Luna County, NM 		35029
         Otero County, NM  		35035
         Sierra County, NM		35051
    				    
       Texas Border Area		UMB09
         Brewster County, TX	48043 
         Brooks County, TX		48047 
         Cameron County, TX         48061
         Crockett County, TX        48105
         Culberson County, TX	48109
         Dimmit County, TX		48127
         Duval County, TX		48131
         Edwards County, TX		48137
         El Paso County, TX		48141
         Frio County, TX		48163
         Hidalgo County, TX		48215
         Hudspeth County, TX	48229
         Jeff Davis County, TX	48243
         Jim Hogg County, TX 	48247
         Kenedy County, TX 		48261
         Kinney County, TX		48271
         La Salle County, TX	48283	
         McMullen County, TX	48311
         Maverick County, TX	48323
         Pecos County, TX		48371
         Presidio County, TX	48377
         Real County, TX		48385
         Reeves County, TX		48389
         Starr County, TX		48427
         Sutton County, TX		48435
         Terrell County, TX		48443
         Uvalde County, TX		48463
         Val Verde County, TX	48465 
         Webb County, TX		48479
         Willacy County, TX		48489
         Zapata County, TX		48505
         Zavala County, TX		48507
    
    U.S. Non-Border Region  		UMB02
    
      Remaining states and counties 
    				
    ________________________________________
    


    Census Regions

    The United States is split into 4 Census Regions: Northeast, Midwest, South and West. The states that comprise each region are shown below.
  4. How?   Notes:  
    • Census Region is based on the person's legal state of residence at the time of death.
    • The Regions are identified by both name and codes in data extracts.

    State abbreviation and name   FIPS code
    ________________________________________ 
    
    Northeast Census Region:
    CT    Connecticut               09
    ME    Maine                     23
    MA    Massachusetts             25
    NH    New Hampshire             33
    NJ    New Jersey                34
    NY    New York                  36
    PA    Pennsylvania              42
    RI    Rhode Island              44
    VT    Vermont                   50
    ________________________________________
    
    Midwest Census Region:
    IL    Illinois                  17
    IN    Indiana                   18
    IA    Iowa                      19
    KS    Kansas                    20
    MI    Michigan                  26
    MN    Minnesota                 27
    MO    Missouri                  29
    NE    Nebraska                  31
    ND    North Dakota              38
    OH    Ohio                      39
    SD    South Dakota              46
    WI    Wisconsin                 55
    ________________________________________ 
    
    South Census Region:
    AL    Alabama                   01
    AR    Arkansas                  05
    DE    Delaware                  10
    DC    District of Columbia      11
    FL    Florida                   12
    GA    Georgia                   13
    KY    Kentucky                  21
    LA    Louisiana                 22
    MD    Maryland                  24
    MS    Mississippi               28
    NC    North Carolina            37
    OK    Oklahoma                  40
    SC    South Carolina            45
    TN    Tennessee                 47
    TX    Texas                     48
    VA    Virginia                  51
    WV    West Virginia             54
    ________________________________________ 
    
    West Census Region:
    AK    Alaska                   02
    AZ    Arizona                  04
    CA    California               06
    CO    Colorado                 08
    HI    Hawaii                   15
    ID    Idaho                    16
    MT    Montana                  30
    NV    Nevada                   32
    NM    New Mexico               35
    OR    Oregon                   41
    UT    Utah                     49
    WA    Washington               53
    WY    Wyoming                  56
    ________________________________________ 
    


    Census Division

    Census Divisions are multi-state groups, sub-sets of Census Regions. You can group by Census Division, or select any combination of individual Census Divisions.
    How?   Notes:  


    HHS Regions

    The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) groups the 50 states, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. territories into ten reporting regions, referred to as the HHS regions. Any number of locations can be specified here.

    How?   Notes:  
    • Data for Puerto Rico or any of the U.S. territories are not included. Therefore, data for Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands are not included in HHS Region 2; data for Guam and American Samoa are not included in HHS Region 9.
    • HHS Region is based on the person's legal state of residence at the time of death.
    • When the data are exported, separate columns show both the label and the code for each value. To see the full list of labels and code values, request data grouped by this region for the "All" and export the results.


       Health and Human Services (HHS) Regions List of States
      1 Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont
      2 New Jersey, New York (data for Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands are not included)
      3 Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia
      4 Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee
      5 Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, Wisconsin
      6 Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas
      7 Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska
      8 Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wyoming
      9 Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada (data for American Samoa and Guam are not included)
    10 Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, Washington


    State

    For state level data, you can select any combination of individual states. Or group by State and leave the Location Finder selection at the default (all locations or the 50 United States and the District of Columbia).
    How?   Notes:  
    • The state coded represents the person's place of legal residence at the time of death.
    • The states and the District of Columbia are identified by both state name and Standard Federal Information Processing (FIPS) codes in data extracts. See About FIPS Codes below.


    County

    County-level data are available for the United States and the District of Columbia. For county level data, you can select any combination of individual counties, or group by County. Leave the Location Finder selection at the default (all locations or the 50 United States and the District of Columbia).
    How?   Notes:  
    • The county coded represents the person's place of legal residence at the time of death.
    • The counties and the District of Columbia are identified by both county name and Standard Federal Information Processing (FIPS) codes in data extracts.
    • About FIPS Codes:   The FIPS State and county codes were established by the National Bureau of Standards, U.S. Department of Commerce in 1968. This standard set of codes provides names and codes for counties and county equivalents of the 50 States of the United States and the District of Columbia. Counties are considered to be the "first order subdivisions" of each State, regardless of their local designation (county, parish, borough, census area). Washington, D.C.; the consolidated government of Columbus City, Georgia; the independent cities of the States of Maryland, Missouri, Nevada, and Virginia; and the census areas and boroughs of Alaska are identified as county equivalents. The system is standard throughout the Federal Government. The State codes are ascending, two-digit numbers; the county codes are ascending three-digit numbers. For both the State and county codes, space has been left for new States or counties. Some changes in the FIPS codes have occurred since 1968. See Location Updates for information on how these changes affect the data.
    • About County Changes:   Comparable total deaths and death rates may be misleading for counties with changing boundaries. See Location Updates for information on how these changes affect the data. Due to boundary changes, data are available for some counties for a limited period of time.
      The following county-level constraints apply to the Underlying Cause of Death data:
      • Alaska:
        • Denali, Alaska (FIPS code 02068) only has data for year 2003 and later. Counts and rates shown in multi-year requests show only two years of data for this entity.
        • Yukon-Koyukuk, Alaska (FIPS code 02290) - changes in deaths and population counts between 2002 - 2003. Beginning in 2003, deaths and population counts for a former part of Yukon-Koyukuk are reported for Denali Borough and are no longer included with data for Yukon-Koyukuk.
      • Colorado:
        • Adams, Colorado (FIPS code 08001) - changes in deaths and population counts between 2002 - 2003. Beginning in 2003, deaths and population counts for a former part of Adams county are reported for Broomfield county, and are no longer included with data for Adams county.
        • Boulder, Colorado (FIPS code 08003) - changes in deaths and population counts between 2002 - 2003. Beginning in 2003, deaths and population counts for a former part of Boulder county are reported for Broomfield county, and are no longer included with data for Boulder county.
        • Broomfield, Colorado (FIPS code 08014) only has data for year 2003 and later. Counts and rates shown in multi-year requests show only two years of data for this entity.
        • Jefferson, Colorado (FIPS code 08059) - changes in deaths and population counts between 2002 - 2003. Beginning in 2003, deaths and population counts for a former part of Jefferson county are reported for Broomfield county, and are no longer included with data for Jefferson county.
        • Weld, Colorado (FIPS code 080123) - changes in deaths and population counts between 2002 - 2003. Beginning in 2003, deaths and population counts for a former part of Weld county are reported for Broomfield county, and are no longer included with data for Weld county.
      • Virginia:
        • Alleghany, Virginia (FIPS code 51005) - changes in deaths and population counts between 2000 - 2001. Beginning in 2001, deaths and population counts for death counts and population estimates for Clifton Forge city, Virginia have been combined with Alleghany county.
        • Clifton Forge city, Virginia (FIPS code 51560) has data for years 1999 - 2000 only. Counts and rates shown in multi-year requests show only two years of data for this entity.

    Urbanization

    Use the radio buttons to select either the 2006 or the 2013 NCHS Urban-Rural Scheme for Counties. Select All Categories or any combination of values: Large Central Metro, Large Fringe Metro, Medium Metro, Small Metro, Micropolitan (non-metro), NonCore (non-metro). Each county is classified as one of six categories. Each death is associated with a category based on the county of the person's legal residence.

    How?  
    1. Click the Radio Button above the box, to pick your preferred list.
    2. See "How do I select items from the list box?," to limit your data to selected categories in the list.

    Notes:  

    • These categories are from the 2006 or 2013 NCHS Urban-Rural Classification Scheme for Counties.
    • See the NCHS Urban-Rural Classification Scheme for Counties web page for more information about the Urbanization categories.
    • The large central metro category contains counties in metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) of one million or more population that have been identified by NCHS classification rules as central because they contain all or part of a principal city of the area. The large fringe metro category contains the remaining counties (similar to suburbs) in MSAs of one million or more. Counties in MSAs of 250,000 to 999,999 population are assigned to the medium metro category and counties in MSAs with populations under 250,000 are assigned to the small metro category. Nonmetropolitan counties that are designated by the Office of Management and Budget as belonging to a micropolitan statistical area are assigned to the micropolitan category and the remaining nonmetropolitan counties are assigned to the noncore category. The large central metro category is the most "urban" category and the noncore category is the most "rural" category.
    • To understand how the classification schemes were developed, see:
    • Most counties are in the same urbanization category for both the 2013 and 2006 schemes. However, for those counties whose category differs in the two schemes, some moved from a less urban to a more urban category, while others moved from a more urban category to a less urban category. For more information, see "Changes in county urbanization category:  2013 scheme versus 2006 scheme" in the report, 2013 NCHS Urban-Rural Classification Scheme for Counties.
    • It is recommended that the micropolitan category not be aggregated with metropolitan categories.
    • The Urbanization categories are identified by two columns, labels and codes, in data extracts.


Step 3. Select demographics:
Limit your data for any of the following data elements:
  1. Age Groups - 10 year age groups, 5 year age groups, single-year ages, infant age groups
  2. Gender - All, Female, Male
  3. Race - All, Black / African American, Other Races Combined, White
  4. Hispanic Origin - All, Hispanic or Latino, Not Hispanic or Latino, Not stated

Age Groups: 10-Year Age Groups, 5-Year Age Groups, Single-Year Ages, Infant Age Groups

First click the round radio button to show the preferred list of age groups. Then select All Ages or any combination of the individual age groups in the list box.

How?  

Notes:  

  • Note that the population for the infant age groups is the number of live births in the given time period. Thus each infant age group population shows the total number of live births in that period of years. For more information about infant age groups, see Mortality for Infants .
  • The population for the other age groups is the population estimate for each age group in the given time period. The population estimates for each year are summed together. For example, if data are requested for the age group "15 - 19 years" in the years 2000-2001, then the population estimate for this age group in the year 2000 is added to the population estimate for this age group in the year 2001. The combined population estimates for the time period are the denominator for the death rates.
  • Deaths of persons with "Unknown" or "Not Stated" age are included in "All" counts and rates, but are not distributed among age groups, so are not included in age-specific counts, age-specific rates or in any age-adjusted rates. See About "Not Stated" age or ethnicity for more information.
  • Refer to Age-Adjusted Rates for a discussion on the use of age-groups in calculating age-adjusted rates. Note that some of the age groups available in the data are not available in the standard population tables used to calculate age-adjusted rates. Deaths of persons of "Not stated" age are not included in age-adjusted rate calculations. Also, age-adjusted rates are not available for infant age groups.
  • Rates and Populations are reported as "Not Applicable" for any subset of ages 85 and over, because population estimates are not available for those ages.
  • Erratum:  Between July 21, 2014 and August 8, 2014, the number of deaths by Single Year of Age reported in CDC WONDER in the year 2011 were inaccurate for the following categories: "< 1 year" and "Not Stated." We regret this error and apologize for any inconvenience.
  • The age groups are identified by two columns, labels and codes, in data extracts.
  • The following age groups are available:


    10-Year Age groups:
    under 1 year
    1 - 4 years
    5 - 14 years
    10 - 14 years
    15 - 24 years
    20 - 24 years
    25 - 34 years
    35 - 44 years
    45 - 54 years
    55 - 64 years
    65 - 74 years
    75 - 84 years
    85 years and over
    Not stated

    - or-

    5-Year Age groups:
    under 1 year
    1 - 4 years
    5 - 9 years
    10 - 14 years
    15 - 19 years
    20 - 24 years
    25 - 29 years
    30 - 34 years
    35 - 39 years
    40 - 44 years
    45 - 49 years
    50 - 54 years
    55 - 59 years
    60 - 64 years
    65 - 69 years
    70 - 74 years
    75 - 79 years
    80 - 84 years
    85 - 89 years
    90 - 94 years
    95 - 99 years
    100 years and over
    Not stated

    - or-

    Single-Year Age groups:
    under 1 year
    to
    100 years and over
    Not stated

    - or-

    Infant age groups (live births):
    under 1 day
    1 - 6 days
    7 - 27 days
    28 - 364 days



Gender

Select All Genders or any combination of other values: female, male.

How?   See "How do I select items from the list box?"

Note:   The genders are identified by two columns, labels and codes, in data extracts.


Race

Select All Races or select any combination of other values: American Indian or Alaskan Native, Asian / Pacific Islander, Black or African American, White.

How?   See "How do I select items from the list box?"

Notes:  

  • See Race and Ethnicity Questions for more information about the issues of race categories and ethnicity in the data.
  • The Race categories are identified by two columns, labels and codes, in data extracts.

Hispanic Origin

Select All values or select any combination of other values: Hispanic or Latino, Not Hispanic or Latino, Not stated.

How?   See "How do I select items from the list box?"

Notes:  

  • Population denominator data are not available for the "Not stated" category, thus rates are flagged as "not applicable."
  • Deaths of persons with unknown or "Not Stated" Hispanic origin are included in "All" counts and rates, but are not distributed among Hispanic Origin groups, so are not included in the Hispanic Origin specific counts and rates . See About "Not Stated" age or ethnicity for more information.
  • See Race and Ethnicity Questions for more information about the issues of race categories and ethnicity in the data.
  • The Hispanic Origin categories are identified by two columns, labels and codes, in data extracts.


Step 4. Select year and month:
Select any specific years or year/month dates to limit your data to the specified time of occurrence of death. The default value is the full range of years and months in the data collection.
How?
  • The first level shows the years. Select one or more years, and then click the Open button below the list to see the months in each year.
  • See "How do I use a Finder?" for help.
  • If you prefer, You can also enter date values by hand:
    1. Click the link for Advanced mode. (Advanced mode is only available when JavaScript is enabled.)
    2. Use yyyy (1994) for years, yyyy/mm (1992/01) for months. Enter one date per line.
  • See Finder Tool help for more hints.
Notes:  
  • Each month is considered a unique combination of year and month, such as July, 2011.
  • Rates and populations are shown as "Not Applicable" for months.
  • When the data are exported, separate columns show both the label and the code for each value.


Step 5. Select weekday, autopsy and place of death:
Limit your data for any of the following data elements:
  1. Weekday of death: - Sunday through Saturday, Unknown
  2. Autopsy performed: - No, Yes, Unknown
  3. Place of Death: - Medical Facility - Inpatient, Medical Facility - Outpatient or ER, Medical Facility - Dead on Arrival, Medical Facility - Status unknown (years 1999-2002 only) Decedent's home, Hospice Facility (years 2003 and later only), Nursing home/long term care, Other, Place of death unknown
Note that rates and populations are shown as "Not Applicable" for Weekday, Autopsy and Place of Death.

Weekday of Death

Select All any combination of other values for the weekday of occurrence of death: Sunday through Saturday, Unknown.

How?   See "How do I select items from the list box?"

Notes:  

  • Note that rates and populations are shown as "Not Applicable" for weekday of death.
  • Data are identified by two columns, labels and codes, in data extracts.

Autopsy Performed

Select All any combination of other values for the whether an autopsy was performed: No, Yes, Unknown.

How?   See "How do I select items from the list box?"

Notes:  

  • Note that rates and populations are shown as "Not Applicable" for whether an autopsy was performed.
  • Data are identified by two columns, labels and codes, in data extracts.

Place of Death

Select All any combination of other values for the place of death: Medical Facility - Inpatient, Medical Facility - Outpatient or ER, Medical Facility - Dead on Arrival, Medical Facility - Status unknown (years 1999-2002 only), Decedent's home, Hospice Facility (years 2003 and later only), Nursing home/long term care, Other, Place of death unknown.

How?   See "How do I select items from the list box?"

Notes:  

  • Note that rates and populations are shown as "Not Applicable" for place of death.
  • The Place of Death categories changed in 2003. The "Medical Facility - Status unknown" category is only available in years 1999-2002. The "Hospice Facility" category is only available in years 2003 and later. Death counts for these categories are shown as "Missing" for those years when the data are unavailable.
  • Data are identified by two columns, labels and codes, in data extracts.


Step 6. Select underlying cause of death:
Select categories that represent the underlying cause of death from the death certificate. Only one underlying cause of death is indicated for each death. Deaths are coded to the International Classification of Disease Tenth Revision (ICD-10) codes. The ICD system is organized by chapters, sub-chapters and codes. Selected causes are also grouped into categories for mortality analysis. Any number of causes can be specified here. However, you can only limit data to one of the lists for any single query. Be sure the Radio Button is set to your choice. Pick between:
  1. ICD-10 Codes listed as chapters, sub-chapters and individual codes
  2. ICD-10 113 Groups for selected causes of death
  3. ICD-10 130 Groups for selected causes of infant mortality
  4. Drug/Alcohol Induced Causes
  5. Injury Intent and Mechanism
Hints:  
  • Only those ICD codes and causes that are used to classify underlying causes of death in the mortality data are available in the Finder for this section. Symptoms are not classified as underlying causes of death.
  • Deaths in the years 1999 and later are coded to the tenth revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). There are 113 selected causes of death groups for the ICD-10 codes.
  • When you select a code, remember that some deaths are coded to the 3 length code, and not the more detailed designation. Thus some deaths may be excluded from your data selection if your criteria are limited to only 4 length codes. For example, the ICD-10 code A09 is the correct specification; A09.0 will not pick up deaths coded A09.
  • The causes of death are identified by two columns, labels and codes, in data extracts.
Notes:  
  • About the International Classification of Diseases:
    The mortality data are compiled in accordance with the World Health Organization (WHO) regulations, which specify that member nations classify and code causes of death in accordance with the current revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD). The International Classification of Diseases is developed collaboratively between the World Health Organization (WHO) and 10 international centers, for purposes of ensuring that medical terms reported on death certificates are internationally comparable and lend themselves to statistical analysis. The ICD has been revised approximately every 10 years since 1900 in order to reflect changes in understanding of disease mechanisms and in disease terminology.
  • See also ICD 10th revision notes.


ICD-10 Codes

Limit the data to any number of causes of death, for selected chapters, sub-chapters or codes. The default selection is "all causes" of death.

How?  
  1. Click the Radio Button to the left of the box, to pick your preferred list.
  2. Select one or more items from the list to limit your data. The default value for any list is all causes of death.
    Hints:
    • See How do use a Finder? to learn more about search options, expanding or collapsing selected items, and displaying details for selected items in the Finder.
    • The "plus" symbol, "+" indicates that you can open the item, to see more items below it.
    • The results to a search are shown in blue, and indicated by ">".
    • The Advanced mode let you easily pick several items from different parts of the list. Items are not selected until you click the "Move" button in Advanced mode.
    • You may also enter values by hand, one code per line, in the Advanced mode. Use the Finder to see the correct code format. For example, "I20-I25" is the ICD-10 code for ischemic heart diseases.
    • See Finder Tool help for more hints.

Notes:  

  • The International Classification of Disease (ICD) 10th revision is used to represent the causes of death for the years 1999 and later. The ICD system is organized by chapters, sub-chapters and codes.
  • ICD-10 uses a 4-length alphanumeric coding scheme. Each of the 21 chapters in ICD-10 is classified to a letter or letters of the alphabet. Infectious disease codes in Chapter 1, for example, begin with an "A" or "B". Thus, Acute poliomyelitis is associated with the codes A80.0-A80.9 and Viral hepatitis is classified as B15.0-B19.9. The ICD 10 system begins codes with a letter from the alphabet, followed by two numerals, then a decimal point to indicate subordinate position, and then more numerals. Some causes of death are represented by 3 length codes, although most causes of death are represented by 4 length codes (format A12.3). Greater detail than 4 length codes are not included in the data.
  • About Underlying Cause of Death:
    • The underlying cause-of-death is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as "the disease or injury which initiated the train of events leading directly to death, or the circumstances of the accident or violence which produced the fatal injury." Underlying cause-of-death is selected from the conditions entered by the physician on the cause of death section of the death certificate. When more than one cause or condition is entered by the physician, the underlying cause is determined by the sequence of conditions on the certificate, provisions of the ICD, and associated selection rules and modifications.
    • Each death certificate contains a single underlying cause of death.
    • Only those ICD codes that are used to classify underlying causes of death in the mortality data are available in the Finder for selecting underlying causes of death. Symptoms are not classified as underlying causes of death.
  • About changes in ICD-10 codes:  
    The valid ICD-10 codes used to classify cause of death change over time, refer to table below for details. Effective with the 2011 data year, 33 codes were introduced as valid causes of death. Effective with the 2009 data year, 5 codes were introduced as valid causes of death, and 11 codes were discontinued. Effective with the 2007 data year, 4 codes were introduced as valid causes of death, and 2 codes were discontinued. Effective with the 2006 data year, 18 codes were introduced as valid causes of death, and 4 codes were discontinued. The World Health Organization (WHO) added code I27.2 in 2003. Prior to 2003, if the certifier listed "secondary pulmonary hypertension" the condition would be coded I27.0 because there was no code for secondary pulmonary hypertension. After code I27.2 was added in 2003, the number of deaths coded to I27.0 dropped significantly.
    New causes of death in 2011
    ICD-10 Code Title
    B17.9 Acute viral hepatitis, unspecified
    D68.5 Primary thrombophilia
    D68.6 Other thrombophilia
    D89.3 Immune reconstitution syndrome
    E88.3 Tumor lysis syndrome
    G14 Postpolio syndrome
    G21.4 Vascular parkinsonism
    H54.9 Unspecified visual impairment (binocular)
    I72.5 Aneurysm and dissection of other precerebral arteries
    J12.3 Human metapneumovirus pneumonia
    J21.1 Acute bronchiolitis due to human metapneumovirus
    K12.3 Oral mucositis (ulcerative)
    K35.2 Acute appendicitis with generalized peritonitis
    K35.3 Acute appendicitis with localized peritonitis
    K35.8 Acute appendicitis, other and unspecified
    L89.0 Stage I decubitus ulcer and pressure area
    L89.1 Stage II decubitus ulcer
    L89.2 Stage III decubitus ulcer
    L89.3 Stage IV decubitus ulcer
    L89.9 Decubitus ulcer and pressure area, unspecified
    N18.1 Chronic kidney disease, stage 1
    N18.2 Chronic kidney disease, stage 2
    N18.3 Chronic kidney disease, stage 3
    N18.4 Chronic kidney disease, stage 4
    N18.5 Chronic kidney disease, stage 5
    N42.3 Dysplasia of prostate
    O14.2 HELLP syndrome
    O43.2 Morbidly adherent placenta
    O96.0 Death from direct obstetric cause occurring more than 42 days but less than one year after delivery
    O96.1 Death from indirect obstetric cause occurring more than 42 days but less than one year after delivery
    O96.9 Death from unspecified obstetric cause occurring more than 42 days but less than one year after delivery
    O97.0 Death from sequelae of direct obstetric cause
    O97.1 Death from sequelae of indirect obstetric cause
    O97.9 Death from sequelae of obstetric cause, unspecified
    O98.7 Human immunodeficiency [HIV] disease complicating pregnancy, childbirth and the puerperium
    X34.0 Victim of cataclysmic earth movements caused by earthquake
    X34.1 Victim of tsunami
    X34.8 Victim of other specified effects of earthquake
    X34.9 Victim of unspecified effect of earthquake
    New causes of death in 2009
    ICD-10 Code Title
    A09.0 Other and unspecified gastroenteritis and colitis of infectious origin
    A09.9 Gastroenteritis and colitis of unspecified origin
    K52.3 Indeterminate colitis
    R26.3 Immobility
    R63.6 Insufficient intake of food and water due to self neglect
    New causes of death in 2007
    ICD-10 Code Title
    J09 Influenza due to identified avian influenza virus
    U04.9 Severe acute respiratory syndrome [SARS], unspecified
    X59.0 Exposure to unspecified factor causing fracture
    X59.9 Exposure to unspecified factor causing other and unspecified injury
    New causes of death in 2006
    ICD-10 Code Title
    B33.4 Hantavirus (cardio)-pulmonary syndrome [HPS][HCPS]
    G90.4 Autonomic dysreflexia
    I15.0 Renovascular hypertension
    I15.9 Secondary hypertension, unspecified
    K22.7 Barrett's esophagus
    K85.0 Idiopathic acute pancreatitis
    K85.1 Biliary acute pancreatitis
    K85.2 Alcohol-induced acute pancreatitis
    K85.3 Drug-induced acute pancreatitis
    K85.8 Other acute pancreatitis
    K85.9 Acute pancreatitis, unspecified
    M31.7 Microscopic polyangiitis
    M79.7 Fibromyalgia
    P91.6 Hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy of newborn
    R29.6 Tendency to fall, not elsewhere classified
    R50.2 Drug-induced fever
    R50.8 Other specified fever
    W46 Contact with hypodermic needle
    New causes of death in 2003
    ICD-10 Code Title
    I27.2 Other secondary pulmonary hypertension

    Discontinued causes of death in 2009
    ICD-10 Code Title
    A09 Diarrhea and gastroenteritis of infectious origin
    F11.0 Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of opioids, acute intoxication
    F12.0 Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of cannabinoids, acute intoxication
    F13.0 Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of sedatives or hypnotics, acute intoxication
    F14.0 Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of cocaine, acute intoxication
    F15.0 Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of other stimulants, including caffeine, acute intoxication
    F16.0 Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of hallucinogens, acute intoxication
    F17.0 Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of tobacco, acute intoxication
    F18.0 Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of volatile solvents, acute intoxication
    F19.0 Mental and behavioral disorders due to multiple drug use and use of other psychoactive substances, acute intoxication
    K51.1 Ulcerative (chronic) ileocolitis

    Discontinued causes of death in 2007
    ICD-10 Code Title
    F10.0 Mental and behavioral disorders due to use of alcohol, acute intoxication
    X59 Exposure to unspecified factor

    Discontinued causes of death in 2006
    ICD-10 Code Title
    I25.2 Old myocardial infarction
    K85 Acute pancreatitis
    R50.0 Fever with chills
    R50.1 Persistent fever

  • About ICD-10 cause of death codes O00-O99:
    Between 2003 and 2017, states were incrementally implementing a pregnancy status checkbox which affected the comparability of data between states. In addition, evaluation of data quality indicated errors following adoption of the checkbox. Beginning with 2018 data, after all states had implemented a checkbox, NCHS restricted use of the checkbox to decedents aged 10-44 years to mitigate probable errors. For more information, please refer to Maternal Mortality Statistics for 2018 at: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/maternal-mortality/.
  • About deaths due to acts of terrorism:  
    Beginning with data for 2001, NCHS introduced categories *U01-*U03 for classifying and coding deaths due to acts of terrorism. The asterisks before the category codes indicate that they are not part of the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10). Description of the specific 4-digit codes can be found at NCHS Classifications of Diseases, Functioning and Disability: Appendix I. Deaths classified to the terrorism categories are included in the categories for Assault (homicide) and Intentional self-harm (suicide) in the 113 cause-of-death list. Additional information on these new categories can be found at NCHS Classifications of Diseases, Functioning and Disability: Classification of Death and Injury Resulting from Terrorism. Terrorism related deaths in this data do not represent a final count of deaths resulting from the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, as this figure had not been determined. As of October 24, 2002, death certificates were issued for 2,957 of the estimated 3,028 individuals believed to have died as a result of the September 11, 2001 attacks. Of these, four were issued for terrorists and are classified as suicides. The criteria for issuing a death certificate for those believed to have died in the attacks differed by state, reflecting differences in state laws regarding death certification. Pennsylvania issued a death certificate for every individual, including the terrorists. Death certificates were not issued for any of the terrorists in Virginia or New York City. Virginia issued a death certificate only for those victims whose remains were identified. New York City issued a death certificate for those whose remains were identified or, if remains were not recovered, for those whose families applied for a death certificate. For more detailed information regarding New York City's processing of these deaths, see Deaths in World Trade Center Terrorist Attacks---New York City, 2001.


ICD-10 113 Cause List - 113 Selected Causes of Death

Limit the data to any number of groups of selected causes of death.

How?  
  1. Click the Radio Button to pick your preferred list.
  2. Select one or more items from the list to limit your data. Use Ctrl + Click for multiple selections, or Shift + Click for a range.

Notes:  

  • Deaths in the years 1999 and later are coded to the tenth revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). There are 113 selected causes of death groups for the ICD-10 codes.
  • NCHS has defined selected causes of death groups for analysis of mortality data: the "113 Selected Causes of Death" for all age groups, and the "130 Selected Cause of Infant Death" categorize ICD-10 codes for analysis of deaths in the years 1999 and later. The group code values are not actual ICD codes published in the International Classification of Diseases, but are "recodes" defined to support analysis by the Selected Causes of Death groups.
  • Group results by "ICD-10 113 Groups" and also by "Cause of Death" to see the individual ICD codes included in each category.
  • A "#" symbol preceding the label indicates a "rankable" cause of death, from the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) list of rankable causes of death. The rankable causes are a subset of the 113 selected causes of death, and the 130 selected causes of death for infants.
  • Group results by "15 Leading Causes" to get death counts and rates for the top 15 rankable causes of death, for your selected query criteria. Note that cross-tabulations, zero value death counts, and suppressed values are not permitted when you group results by "15 Leading Causes." When more than one rankable cause of death occurs in the last position, all these causes are shown.


ICD-10 130 Cause List (Infants) - 130 Selected Causes of Infant Death

Limit the data to any number of groups of selected causes of death for infants.

How?  
  1. Click the Radio Button to pick your preferred list.
  2. Select one or more items from the list to limit your data. Use Ctrl + Click for multiple selections, or Shift + Click for a range.

Notes:  

  • Deaths in the years 1999 and later are coded to the tenth revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). There are 130 Selected Causes of Infant Death groups for the ICD-10 codes.
  • NCHS has defined selected causes of death groups for analysis of all ages mortality data: the "113 Selected Causes of Death" for all age groups, and the "130 Selected Cause of Infant Death" categorize ICD-10 codes for analysis of deaths in the years 1999 and later. The group code values are not actual ICD codes published in the International Classification of Diseases, but are "recodes" defined to support analysis by the Selected Causes of Death groups.
  • Group the data by "ICD-10 130 Groups" and also by "Cause of Death" to see the individual ICD codes included in each category.
  • A "#" symbol preceding the label indicates a "rankable" cause of death, from the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) list of rankable causes of death. The rankable causes are a subset of the 113 selected causes of death, and the 130 selected causes of death for infants.
  • Group results by "15 Leading Causes" to get death counts and rates for the top 15 rankable causes of death, for your selected query criteria. Note that cross-tabulations, zero value death counts, and suppressed values are not permitted when you group results by "15 Leading Causes." When more than one rankable cause of death occurs in the last position, all these causes are shown.


Drug/Alcohol Induced Causes

Limit the data to any number of groups of selected causes of death, or individual codes.

How?  
  1. Click the Radio Button to pick your preferred list.
  2. Select one or more items from the list to limit your data. Use Ctrl + Click for multiple selections, or Shift + Click for a range.

Notes:  

  • Deaths in the years 1999 and later are coded to the tenth revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10).
  • NCHS has defined selected causes of death groups for analysis of all ages mortality data: Drug-Induced causes, Alcohol-Induced Causes, All Other Causes. The group code values are not actual ICD codes published in the International Classification of Diseases, but are "recodes" defined to support analysis by the Selected Causes of Death groups.
  • Group the data by "Drug/Alcohol Induced Causes" and also by "Cause of Death" to see the individual ICD codes included in each category.


Injury Intent and Mechanism

Limit your data for any of the following data elements: 

  1. Injury Intent
  2. Injury Mechanism & All Other Leading Causes
About the External Cause of Injury Mortality Matrix:

For the analysis of injury mortality data, all causes of death have been classified by intent and by mechanism. The causes of death that are not related to injuries have been categorized as non-injuries, and are categorized in keeping with the 113 selected causes of death groups for ICD-10. The groups of injury mechanisms are different from those based on the "113 Selected Causes of Death" for ICD-10 codes. The groupings are based on the External Cause of Injury Mortality Matrix. In addition, some non-injury groups have been combined to make for broader categories, such as Heart Disease and Tuberculosis.

For more information, see:   External Cause of Injury Mortality Matrix.



Injury Intent

Limit the data to any number of categories.

How?  
  1. Click the Radio Button to pick your preferred list.
  2. Select one or more items from the list to limit your data. Use Ctrl + Click for multiple selections, or Shift + Click for a range.

Notes:  



Injury Mechanism & All Other Leading Causes

Limit the data to any number of categories.

How?  
  1. Click the Radio Button to pick your preferred list.
  2. Select one or more items from the list to limit your data. Use Ctrl + Click for multiple selections, or Shift + Click for a range.

Notes:  

  • Group the data by "Injury Mechanism" and also by "Cause of Death" to see the individual ICD codes included in each category.
  • NCHS has defined selected causes of death groups for analysis of injury mortality data. The groups of injury mechanisms are different from those based on the "113 Selected Causes of Death" for ICD-10 codes. The groupings are based on the External Cause of Injury Mortality Matrix. In addition, some non-injury groups have been combined to make for broader categories, such as Heart Disease and Tuberculosis.
  • Refer to External Cause of Injury Mortality Matrix for more information.
  • In order to allow analysis of Injury Mortality across a larger span of years, the ICD-9 codes that classify the underlying cause of death for years 1979 - 1998 have been categorized to be compatible with the ICD-10 External Cause of Mortality Matrix. The categories in WONDER differ slightly from the original ICD-9 External Cause of Mortality Matrix, as follows:


ICD-9 Codes and Updated Injury Mechanism Categories

ICD-9 Code Values Categories in the original
ICD-9 External Cause Mortality Matrix
Categories compatible with the
ICD-10 External Cause of Mortality Matrix
E990 Other specified and classifiable, legal intervention Fire or hot object or substance, legal intervention
E800 -  E807(.0,.1,.8,.9),    
E820 - E825(.0 - .5,.8,.9), E826(.2 - .8), E827 - E829(.2 - .9)
Transport, other, unintentional Other land transport, unintentional
E846 Other specified and classifiable, unintentional Other land transport, unintentional
E958.5 Motor Vehicle Traffic, suicide Other land transport, suicide
E988.5 Motor Vehicle Traffic, undetermined Other land transport, undetermined
E830 - E832 Drowning, Unintentional Other transport, unintentional
E847 - E848 Other specified and classifiable, unintentional Other transport, unintentional
E994 Other specified and classifiable, legal intervention Other transport, legal intervention
E958(.3) Natural or environmental, suicide Other specified classifiable, suicide
E958(.6) Transport, other, suicide Other specified, not elsewhere classified, suicide
E988(.3) Natural or environmental, undetermined Other specified classifiable, undetermined
E988(.6) Transport, other, undetermined Other specified, not elsewhere classified, undetermined



Step 7. Other options:
Export Results:    If checked query results are exported to a local file. More information on how to import this file into other applications can be found here.
How? See "How do I use a checkbox?"
Show Totals:    If checked totals and sub-totals will appear in the results table.
How? See "How do I use a checkbox?"
Show Zero Values:    If checked, rows containing zero counts are included in the results table. If unchecked, zero count rows are not included.
How? See "How do I use a checkbox?"
Precision:    Select the precision for rate calculations. When the rate calculated for a small numerator (incidence count) is zero, you may increase the precision to reveal the rate by showing more numbers to the right of the decimal point.
How? See "How do I select items from the list box?"
Data Access Timeout:    This value specifies the maximum time to wait for the data access for a query to complete. If the data access takes too long to complete, a message will be displayed and you can increase the timeout or simplify your request. If you can't complete a request using the maximum timeout, contact user support and we will try to run a custom data request for you.
How? See "How do I select items from the list box?"

Data Source Information

Mortality Data Sources:    The Underlying Cause of Death data are produced by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Mortality information is collected by state registries and provided to the National Vital Statistics System. Underlying cause of death and demographic descriptors are indicated on the death certificates. Each death certificate contains a single underlying cause of death, up to twenty additional multiple causes, and demographic data. The underlying cause-of-death is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as "the disease or injury which initiated the train of events leading directly to death, or the circumstances of the accident or violence which produced the fatal injury." Underlying cause-of-death is selected from the conditions entered by the physician on the cause of death section of the death certificate. When more than one cause or condition is entered by the physician, the underlying cause is determined by the sequence of conditions on the certificate, provisions of the International Classification of Diseases, and associated selection rules and modifications.

To learn more about the methods and source of these data please reference:

Population Denominator Data Sources:    The population estimates are bridged-race estimates based on Bureau of the Census estimates of total U.S., State, and county resident populations. The 1999 population estimates are intercensal estimates of the July 1 resident population, based on the year 1999 and year 2000 census counts. The year 2000 and year 2010 populations are April 1 modified census counts. The 2001 through 2009 population estimates are revised intercensal estimates of the July 1 resident population, based on the year 2000 and year 2010 census counts (released by NCHS on 10/26/2012). The archive population estimates for years 2001 - 2009 are postcensal estimates of the July 1 resident population. The 2011 - 2018 population estimates are postcensal estimates of the July 1 resident population. Note that these estimates are based on bridged-race categories. The population estimates are by geographic unit (total United States, State, and county), year, race (white, black, other races), sex, and age group (13 age groups). To permit the calculation of infant mortality rates, NCHS live-birth data are included on the file.

For more information on the population estimates, see:

Population Data


Additional Information

Suggested Data Source Citations:   

United States Department of Health and Human Services (U.S. DHHS),
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS),
Underlying Cause of Death with U.S. - Mexico Border Regions 1999-2018 on CDC WONDER Online Database, released February, 2020. Data are from the Multiple Cause of Death Files, 1999-2018, as compiled from data provided by the 57 vital statistics jurisdictions through the Vital Statistics Cooperative Program. U.S. - Mexico border area counties are demarcated as the 44 counties that are located within 100 kilometers (62 miles) defined under the 1983 La Paz Agreement.

Data for year 2018 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2018, Series 20, No. 2X, 2020.
Data for year 2017 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2017, Series 20, No. 2W, 2018.
Data for year 2016 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2016, Series 20, No. 2V, 2017.
Data for year 2015 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2015, Series 20, No. 2U, 2016.
Data for year 2014 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2014, Series 20, No. 2T, 2015.
Data for year 2013 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2013, Series 20, No. 2S, 2014.
Data for year 2012 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2012, Series 20, No. 2R, 2014.
Data for year 2011 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2011, Series 20, No. 2Q, 2014.
Data for year 2010 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2010, Series 20, No. 2P, 2012.
Data for year 2009 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2009, Series 20, No. 2O, 2012.
Data for year 2008 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2008, Series 20, No. 2N, 2011.
Data for year 2007 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2007, Series 20, No. 2M, 2010.
Data for years 2005-2006 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 2005-2006, Series 20, No. 2L, 2009.
Data for years 1999-2004 are compiled from the Multiple Cause of Death File 1999-2004, Series 20, No. 2J, 2007.
Accessed at http://wonder.cdc.gov/ucd-icd10.html.

The suggested citation including the original series for the data is shown below each table, chart or map.

Contact:    For data questions that are not addressed in this document, e-mail nchsquery@cdc.gov.
Other Issues:    Reference the following topics:
Frequently Asked Questions about Death Rates
Mortality Data
Infant Mortality
Population Estimates
Age Adjustment of Death Rates
Assurance of Confidentiality
International Classification of Diseases (ICD)
Locations: About County Level Changes
Contact for Data Questions
Suggested Citation

Notes:

  • Reporting anomalies:
    • About Georgia reporting anomalies in 2008-2009:  Circumstances in Georgia for the years 2008 and 2009 have resulted in unusually high death counts for the Place of Death category "Place of death unknown" and for the ICD-10 cause of death code R99, "Other ill-defined and unspecified causes of mortality" for deaths occurring in years 2008 and 2009. Caution should be used in interpreting these data. For more information, see Deaths: Final Data for 2008.
    • About New Jersey reporting anomalies in 2009:  Circumstances in New Jersey for the year 2009 have resulted in unusually high death counts for the ICD-10 cause of death code R99, "Other ill-defined and unspecified causes of mortality" and therefore unusually low death counts in other ICD-10 codes, most notably R95, "Sudden Infant Death Syndrome" and X40-X49, "Unintentional poisoning." Caution should be used in interpreting these data. For more information, see Deaths: Final Data for 2009.
    • About Allen Parish, Louisiana reporting anomalies in 2006-2008:  Deaths for Allen Parish, Louisiana (FIPS code 22003] in years 2006 through 2008 are under reported due to problems with registering the deaths with the Louisiana Vital Statistics Office.
    • About California reporting anomalies in 2000 - 2001:  Circumstances in California resulted in unusually high death counts for the ICD-10 cause of death code R99, "Other ill-defined and unspecified causes of mortality" for deaths occurring in years 2000 and 2001. Caution should be used in interpreting these data.
    • About cause of death classification changes: 
  • Demographic reporting:
    • Deaths of persons with Age "Not Stated" are included in "All" counts and rates, but are not distributed among age groups, so are not included in age-specific counts, age-specific rates or in any age-adjusted rates. For more information, see Not Stated Age or Ethnicity.
    • Information included on the death certificate about the race and Hispanic ethnicity of the decedent is reported by the funeral director as provided by an informant, often the surviving next of kin, or, in the absence of an informant, on the basis of observation. Race and ethnicity information from the census is by self-report. To the extent that race and Hispanic origin are inconsistent between these two data sources, death rates will be biased. For more information, see Race and Ethnicity Reporting.
  • Revisions and errata: 
    • About revised 2014 deaths:   A revised data file for 2014 was released on April 3, 2017 to include corrections affecting 125 deaths previously coded to "Accidental discharge of firearms" (ICD-10 codes W32-W34). This corrected file replaced the file released on December 9, 2015. The underlying cause of death changed for 125 deaths in 2014 that occurred in Tennessee (80%) and Massachusetts (20%). (Note: Data by state of residence are also impacted in Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina and Virginia for records where the death occurred in Tennessee or Massachusetts but the decedent was a resident of another state.) Prior to the revision, the underlying cause of death for all 125 deaths were classified as "Accidental discharge of firearms" (ICD-10 codes W32-W34). After the revision, 50% of the changed records are now classified as "Assault (homicide) by discharge of firearms" (ICD-10 codes *U01.4, X93-X95); 42% are now classified as "Intentional self-harm (suicide) by discharge of firearms (ICD-10 codes X72-X74); 4% of the revised death records are now classified as "Discharge of firearms, undetermined intent" (ICD-10 codes Y22-Y24); and the remaining 4% to various other causes. For more information, please refer to Deaths: Final Data for 2014.
    • Two counties in Connecticut in year 2000:  County of residence is misidentified in 316 deaths that occurred in the year 2000, for Hartford County, CT (FIPS code 09003) and New London County, CT (FIPS code 09011). Data for the aggregate state of Connecticut for deaths occurring in year 2000 are correct, as well as data for the aggregate of the 2 counties combined. This discrepancy affects the Detailed Mortality (Underlying cause of Death) and the Multiple Cause of Death online databases in CDC WONDER, as well as the all-county Multiple Cause of Death data set for year 2000. However, the Compressed Mortality data set correctly identifies the county of residence for the 316 deaths in year 2000 in Connecticut.
    • About Clostridium difficile (A04.7) deaths:  Between October 22, 2013 and April 10, 2020, the number of deaths with the underlying cause of death classified as ICD-10 code A04.7 for "Enterocolitis due to Clostridium difficile" reported in CDC WONDER was inaccurately doubled, when the query did not group results by the 113 Cause List and both of the following categories were specifically selected in 113 Cause List: "Certain other intestinal infections (A04,A07-A09)" and "#Enterocolitis due to Clostridium difficile (A04.7)." We regret this error and apologize for any inconvenience.



Population Estimates

Reference the following topics to learn more about population denominators for rate calculation:

Population Information

1999 Population Estimates
2000 Population
2001 - 2009 Population Estimates
2010 Population
2011 Population
2012 Population
2013 Population
2014 Population
2015 Population
2016 Population
2017 Population
2018 Population
Archive 2001 - 2009 Population Estimates
Population migration due to hurricanes in 2005
Comparison with other releases



Population Information

The population data are bridged-race estimates derived from U.S. Census Bureau files. The population estimates for the year 1999 are intercensal estimates of the July 1, resident population, estimates based on both the year 1990 and year 2000 census counts. The population estimates for the Census years 2000 and 2010 are April 1, modified census counts. The population estimates for the years 2001 through 2009 are revised intercensal estimates of the July 1, resident population, estimates based on both the year 2000 and year 2010 census counts (released by NCHS on 10/26/12). The population estimates for the years 2011 - 2014 are postcensal estimates of the July 1, resident population.
Note: The archive population estimates for the non-Census years 2001 through 2009 are postcensal estimates of the July 1, resident population.

The following modifications of the Census population estimates were made by NCHS:

  1. To permit the calculation of infant mortality rates, NCHS live-birth data are included for "Infant age Groups." The race code for these records is derived from "race of mother".
  2. When the age group 1-4 years did not appear on the Census file, the age group 0-4 years was multiplied by 0.8 to obtain an estimate of the population 1-4 years.

Specific Details

  1. 1999 Population Estimates

    The population estimates for 1999 are county-level U.S. Census Bureau bridged-race intercensal estimates of the July 1, resident population, based on the 1990 census and the bridged-race 2000 census. Derivation of the race-specific intercensal population estimates for the 1990s was complicated by the incomparability of the race data on the 1990 and 2000 censuses. Before the intercensal estimates for the 1990s could be derived, the race groups on the 2000 census had to be made consistent with ("bridged to") the race groups on the 1990 census. Race data on the 2000 Census were collected in accordance with the 1997 Office of Management and Budget's standards on race and ethnicity. The 1997 standards specify 5 single-race categories (American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African American, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and White) and permit the reporting of more than one race. As a result, there were 31 race groups on the 2000 census (5 single-race groups and 26 multiple-race groups). NCHS, in collaboration with the Census Bureau, developed methodology for bridging the multiple-race groups to single-race categories (American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian or Pacific Islander, Black, and White). The 1990 census race groups are White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander.

  2. 2000 Population Estimates

    National, state, and county population estimates are from the U.S. Census Bureau April 1, bridged modified race 2000 Census counts. The original census counts were modified by the U.S. Census Bureau to assign persons who reported their race as "other " to one of the 31 single or multiple-race groups specified in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 1997 Standards on Race and Ethnicity. The resulting counts were then bridged to (made consistent with) the four single-race categories on the 1990 Census (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander).

  3. 2001 - 2009 Population Estimates

    The current population estimates for years 2001 through 2009 are July 1 resident population estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau's bridged-race revised intercensal series (released by NCHS on 10/26/12). The bridged-race population files have estimates for the four single-race categories (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander). The revised intercensal July 1st population estimates for years 2001-2009 takes into account both the year 2000 and the year 2010 April 1st Census counts.

    The national, region, division, and state estimates were obtained by summing the county estimates, so the region, division, state and county estimates are consistent with each other within a given year. The population estimates correspond to the revised intercensal series (released by NCHS on 10/26/12) that was used to produce the trends tables, when NCHS published the "Final Report" for deaths in year 2010.

  4. 2010 Population Estimates

    National, state, and county population estimates are from the U.S. Census Bureau April 1, bridged modified race 2010 Census counts. The original census counts were modified by the U.S. Census Bureau to assign persons who reported their race as "other " to one of the 31 single or multiple-race groups specified in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 1997 Standards on Race and Ethnicity. The resulting counts were then bridged to (made consistent with) the four single-race categories on the 1990 Census (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander).

  5. 2011 Population Estimates

    National, state, and county population estimates are July 1 resident population estimates from the Vintage 2011 bridged-race postcensal series (released by NCHS on 7/18/2012). The bridged-race population files have estimates for the four single-race categories (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander). The postcensal July 1st population estimates are based on the year 2010 April 1st Census counts.

    The national, region, division, and state estimates were obtained by summing the county estimates, so the region, division, state and county estimates are consistent with each other within a given year.

  6. 2012 Population Estimates

    National, state, and county population estimates are July 1 resident population estimates from the Vintage 2012 bridged-race postcensal series (released by NCHS on 6/13/2013). The bridged-race population files have estimates for the four single-race categories (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander). The postcensal July 1st population estimates are based on the year 2010 April 1st Census counts.

    The national, region, division, and state estimates were obtained by summing the county estimates, so the region, division, state and county estimates are consistent with each other within a given year.

  7. 2013 Population Estimates

    National, state, and county population estimates are July 1 resident population estimates from the Vintage 2013 bridged-race postcensal series (released by NCHS on 6/26/2014). The bridged-race population files have estimates for the four single-race categories (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander). The postcensal July 1st population estimates are based on the year 2010 April 1st Census counts.

    The national, region, division, and state estimates were obtained by summing the county estimates, so the region, division, state and county estimates are consistent with each other within a given year.

  8. 2014 Population Estimates

    National, state, and county population estimates are July 1 resident population estimates from the Vintage 2014 bridged-race postcensal series (released by NCHS on 6/30/2015). The bridged-race population files have estimates for the four single-race categories (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander). The postcensal July 1st population estimates are based on the year 2010 April 1st Census counts.

    The national, region, division, and state estimates were obtained by summing the county estimates, so the region, division, state and county estimates are consistent with each other within a given year.

  9. 2015 Population Estimates

    National, state, and county population estimates are July 1 resident population estimates from the Vintage 2015 bridged-race postcensal series (released by NCHS on 6/28/2016). The bridged-race population files have estimates for the four single-race categories (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander). The postcensal July 1st population estimates are based on the year 2010 April 1st Census counts.

    The national, region, division, and state estimates were obtained by summing the county estimates, so the region, division, state and county estimates are consistent with each other within a given year.

  10. 2016 Population Estimates

    National, state, and county population estimates are July 1 resident population estimates from the Vintage 2016 bridged-race postcensal series (released by NCHS on 6/26/2017). The bridged-race population files have estimates for the four single-race categories (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander). The postcensal July 1st population estimates are based on the year 2010 April 1st Census counts.

    The national, region, division, and state estimates were obtained by summing the county estimates, so the region, division, state and county estimates are consistent with each other within a given year.

  11. 2017 Population Estimates

    National, state, and county population estimates are July 1 resident population estimates from the Vintage 2017 bridged-race postcensal series (released by NCHS on 6/27/2018). The bridged-race population files have estimates for the four single-race categories (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander). The postcensal July 1st population estimates are based on the year 2010 April 1st Census counts.

    The national, region, division, and state estimates were obtained by summing the county estimates, so the region, division, state and county estimates are consistent with each other within a given year.

  12. 2018 Population Estimates

    National, state, and county population estimates are July 1 resident population estimates from the Vintage 2018 bridged-race postcensal series (released by NCHS on 6/25/2019). The bridged-race population files have estimates for the four single-race categories (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander). The postcensal July 1st population estimates are based on the year 2010 April 1st Census counts.

    The national, region, division, and state estimates were obtained by summing the county estimates, so the region, division, state and county estimates are consistent with each other within a given year.

  13. Archive 2001 - 2009 Population Estimates 

    The archive population estimates for 2001 - 2009 are July 1 resident population estimates from the U.S. Census Bureau's bridged-race postcensal series. The bridged-race population files have estimates for the four single-race categories (White, Black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander). The national, region, division, state and county population figures for 2001 - 2009 are county-level bridged-race postcensal estimates of the July 1 resident population from the corresponding postcensal series: 2001 and 2002 from the Vintage 2002 series, 2003 from the Vintage 2003 series, 2004 from the Vintage 2004 series, 2005 from the Vintage 2005 series, 2006 from the Vintage 2006 series, 2007 from the Vintage 2007 series, 2008 from the Vintage 2008 series, and 2009 from the Vintage 2009 series.

    The national, region, division, and state estimates were obtained by summing the county estimates, so the region, division, state and county estimates are consistent with each other within a given year. The population estimates correspond to the series that was used when NCHS published the "Final Report" for deaths in the given year, except for year 2001, because detailed population estimates are not available until the 2002 series.

    See Comparison with Other Releases below for more information, and instruction on how to reproduce archive rates and populations.

  14. About population migration due to hurricanes in 2005: 

    The state and county population estimates for Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas reflect population changes that occurred after Hurricane Katrina and Rita in 2005. To accommodate geographic shifts of the Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas populations resulting from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005, the U.S. Census Bureau developed adjustments in the methodology for state and county population estimates. See methodology for more information.

    Note: this concern refers to the archive postcensal population estimates for the years 2005-2009.

  15. Comparison with other releases:

    The current rates and population figures for years 2001-2009 are different from the previous release of these data on CDC WONDER. A different series of population estimates is currently used to calculate rates for 2001-2009. Current population figures for years 2001-2009, other than the infant age groups, are bridged-race estimates of the July 1 resident population, from the revised intercensal county-level 2000-2009 series, released by NCHS on October 26, 2012.

    Archive population figures for 2001-2009, other than the infant age groups, are postcensal bridged-race estimates of the July 1 resident population; see Archive 2001-2009 Population Estimates for more information. Archive rates and population figures for years 2001-2009 match NCHS mortality reports published in that time period, but differ slightly from reports published after 2009, because later reports are calculated with more recently produced population estimates for those years. If you wish to reproduce archive rates and populations from the preceding release:

    1. Click "+" to open Additional Rate Options in section 1 of the Request Form.
    2. Check the box labeled "Archive rates (calculated with postcensal populations for 2001-2009)."
    3. Refer to the Notes section below the resulting table, map or chart to see the specific population sources for the population figures and rates. Please make note of the archive population sources when citing archive statistics.
    4. Use of the current data is strongly recommended and encouraged.

    Reports of trends for the 2000-2010 decade published in the 2012 year before October 26, 2012 calculated rates with early releases of the 2000-2010 intercensal estimates of U.S. resident population. These early releases were superseded by the revised intercensal release of July 1 estimates of the U.S. population in October 2012. The current (default) populations for years 2001-2009 used here are the revised intercensal July 1 Bridged-race population estimates of the U.S. resident population, released by NCHS on October 26, 2012). Therefore, the rates and populations differ slightly from publications produced before October 26, 2012.

    Other releases of archive mortality data on CDC WONDER, such as Compressed Mortality and previous releases of Multiple Cause Mortality, use a different approach for population denominator data: national population figures for 2001 - 2009 are county-level bridged-race postcensal estimates of the July 1 resident population from the corresponding postcensal series: 2001 from the 2001 series, 2002 from the 2002 series, and so on. However, the region, division, state and county estimates are derived from county-level estimates of the most recently available postcensal series at the time of publication. For example, the previously released Multiple Cause Mortality 2005-2006 online database includes regional, state and county population figures derived from the Vintage 2007 postcensal series for years 2005-2006. The Compressed Mortality 1999-2008 online database includes regional, state and county population figures derived from the Vintage 2009 postcensal series for years 2001-2008.

If you have additional questions about the population estimates, please see U.S. Census Populations With Bridged Race Categories (http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/about/major/dvs/popbridge/popbridge.htm) or contact PopEst@cdc.gov.


Frequently Asked Questions about Mortality

The questions are in three sections:

Questions about Death Rates
Data Release Questions
Race and Ethnicity Questions

  1. Questions about Death Rates

    1. How do I get the top 15 leading causes of death in WONDER?

      Group results by "15 Leading Causes" to get death counts and rates for the top 15 rankable causes of death, for your selected query criteria. Note that cross-tabulations, zero value death counts, and suppressed values are not permitted when you group results by "15 Leading Causes." When more than one rankable cause of death occurs in the last position, all these causes are shown.

      The "leading causes of death" published by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) are also called "rankable causes of death." The rankable causes are a subset of the 113 selected causes of death, and the 130 selected causes of death for infants. A "#" symbol preceding the label indicates a "rankable" cause of death, from the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) list of rankable causes of death.

    2. How are crude death rates calculated in WONDER?

      The "crude death rate" is the number of deaths divided by the population, multiplied by 100,000.

      Crude Death Rate = (number of deaths / population) * 100,000

      Note: 100,000 is the default multiplier, other multipliers can be specified in the query.

    3. How are age-adjusted death rates calculated in WONDER?

      The age-adjusted rate is calculated by multiplying the age-specific death rate for each age group by the corresponding weight from the specified standard population, summing across all age groups, and then multiplying this result by 100,000 (or whatever multiplier is specified in the query).

      Age-Adjusted Death Rate = Sum of (Age Specific Death Rate * Standard Population weight) * 100,000

      The age-specific death rate is the number of deaths for a given age group divided by the population of that age group.

      Age Specific Death Rate = (number of deaths in age group / population of age group)

      The "standard population weight " for an age group is calculated by dividing the population for the age group by the sum of the populations for all of the age groups in the query. Please see the question below on "children under 1 year" age categories.

      Standard Population Weight = population for age group
      / sum of age group populations for all age groups in query

      See http://seer.cancer.gov/seerstat/tutorials/aarates/definition.html for a step-by-step tutorial with an example of the calculations.

      Note that the precision of the age-specific death rate is rounded to 1 decimal place, before proceeding to the next step in the calculation of age-adjusted death rates for NCHS Detailed Mortality and NCHS Multiple Cause of Death on WONDER, in order to match rates in NCHS publications. However, Compressed Mortality on WONDER does not round the age-specific death rate. Slight differences may be noted when comparing age-adjusted deaths rates. This rounding step may have a more noticeable effect on the precision of rates calculated for small numbers of deaths.

    4. What are the "Standard" and "Non-Standard" populations?

      WONDER allows the user to select the population distribution used for calculating age-adjusted rates. Three "Standard" populations are offered: the year 2000 standard population (the default), the 1970 standard population, and the 1940 standard population. Alternatively, the user can specify a "Non-Standard" population for use as the population distribution in the age-adjustment.

      • The 1940 and 2000 standard populations were obtained from the National Center for Health Statistics. Beginning with the 1999 data year, NCHS adopted the year 2000 projected population of the U.S. as the standard population for use in age adjusting death rates. The year 2000 standard replaced the 1940 standard population that had been used for over 50 years. The new population standard affects levels of mortality, and to some extent, trends and group comparisons.

      • The 1970 standard population is the one used by the National Cancer Institute.

      • When the user requests that a "non-standard " population is used in the calculation of age-adjusted rates, WONDER uses the Census population estimates/counts included in the data to determine the weights used in the age-adjustment. See Population Data Description for more information.

    5. What age categories are used for age-adjusted rates?

      Only age groups that fall within the age range specified in the query are used to calculate an age-adjusted rate. The "total population" for a query is the sum of the populations of each age group included in that query. For example, if an age-adjusted rate is requested for 45-74 year olds, then the total population is the sum of the 45-54 year olds, 55-64 year olds, and 65-74 year old populations. For the 1940, 1970 and 2000 standard populations, the possible age groups are:

      less than 1 year, 1-4, 5-14, 15-24, 25-34, ....85 years and over.

      If the user specifies a "non-standard" population for use in age-adjustment, then any age groups may be used.

      Note that age groups differ from the age groups used for "standard" years.

      See Age Adjustment of Death Rates for more information.

    6. What about children under 1 year and rate calculation?

      When calculating mortality rates for "Infant Age Groups" (under 1 day, 1-6 days, 7-27 days, 28-264 days), the population is the number of live births in the given time period. Note that rates for infant age groups are not shown for fewer than twenty deaths, nor are race and Hispanic Origin data available, due to privacy constraints; see Assurance of Confidentiality for more information. Note that age-adjusted rates are not calculated for infant age groups, because the denominator population is the number of live births in the specified years.

      However, rates for race and Hispanic Origin are available for the age group "under 1 year of age." The "under 1 year of age" age group represents the population estimates for the given time period. For more information, see Mortality for Infants.

    7. Why are death rates sometimes flagged as "Unreliable" or "Suppressed"?

      Death rates based on counts of less than twenty (death count < 20) are flagged as "Unreliable". A death rate based on fewer than 20 deaths has a relative standard error (RSE(R)) of 23 percent or more. A RES(R) of 23 percent is considered statistically unreliable.

      Death counts and death rates are "Suppressed" when the data meets the criteria for confidentiality constraints. See Assurance of Confidentiality for more information.

    8. What are the "archive" rates and populations?

      "Archive" rates and population figures refer to statistics produced by preceding releases of these data. Population estimates are updated and revised over time, newer population estimates replace previous estimates. Rates calculated with revised population estimates may differ from previous figures. For more information, see Comparison with Other Releases.

  2. Data Release Questions

    1. What are the Assurance of Confidentiality constraints for the data?

      Data reports for years 1989 and later must meet the NCHS data use restrictions. Vital statistics data are suppressed due to confidentiality constraints, in order to protect personal privacy. The term "Suppressed" replaces sub-national death counts, births counts, death rates and associated confidence intervals and standard errors, as well as corresponding population figures, when the figure represents zero to nine (0-9) persons.

      As of December 12, 2011, additional privacy constraints apply to infant mortality statistics representing infant age groups and live births as the denominator population. When an infant mortality measure represents fewer than ten (0-9) infant deaths, all corresponding live birth population denominator figures are suppressed. When the infant mortality measure represents ten to nineteen (10-19) infant deaths, the number of deaths and live births are shown, but rates and associated measures are not shown. Race and Hispanic origin data are not available in this online database for infant age groups. However, race and Hispanic origin data are available for persons under one year of age in the other age groups, which use population estimates as population denominator data. Race and Hispanic origin detail for infant mortality statistics are available in the Linked Birth / Infant Death Records data collections.

      Prior to May 23, 2011, data cells in tables for year 1989 and later years were suppressed only for single county-level data, when the data represented five or fewer (1-5) deaths for a time period less than three years, and the county's total population in the April 1st, 2000 Census was fewer than one hundred thousand (100,000) persons. Prior to December 12, 2011, the same constraints applied to infant mortality statistics and all-ages mortality statistics.

      Totals and sub-totals are suppressed when the value falls within scope of the suppression criteria, or when the summary value includes a single suppressed figure, in order to prevent the inadvertent disclosure of suppressed values.

      The confidentiality constraints and use of the "Unreliable" flag are established by the original data providers. For more information, please contact the data providers.

    2. What are my responsibilities in accessing this data?

      See Data Use Restrictions to review the policies affecting access to the data. Note that use of the data implies consent or agreement to abide by the policies.

  3. Race and Ethnicity Questions

    1. What racial categories are included?

      The 1999-2018 data has these four race groups: American Indian or Alaskan Native, Asian / Pacific Islander, Black or African American, White. The 1999-2018 data has 3 Hispanic Origin categories: Hispanic or Latino, Not Hispanic or Latino, Not stated.

    2. How are multi-racial persons classified?

      Race data are collected on death certificates in accordance with the 1977 OMB standards on race and ethnicity. The 1977 standards specified four race categories (white, black, American Indian or Alaska Native, and Asian or Pacific Islander) and did not permit more than one racial category to be identified for an individual. Population data through the 1990s were also obtained in accordance with the 1977 standards. Race data on the 2000 census were collected in accordance with the 1997 OMB standards on race and ethnicity. The 1997 standards specify 5 single-race categories (American Indian or Alaskan Native, Asian, black, Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and white) and permit the reporting of more than one race. As a result, there were 31 racial groups on the 2000 census (5 single-race groups and 26 multiple-race groups). NCHS, in collaboration with the Census Bureau, developed methodology for bridging the multiple-race groups to single-race categories, so that the race categories in the population data would match the race categories in the mortality data. Please see U.S. Census Populations With Bridged Race Categories.

    3. How are Hispanic persons who reported their race as "Other" on the census assigned to a race group?

      The Census Bureau has assigned all persons (including Hispanic persons) who specified their race as "other" on the census (1980, 1990, and 2000) to one of the OMB specified racial categories. The algorithm used by the Census Bureau to make these assignments has differed for the 1980, 1990, and 2000 censuses, and is described in the Population Data section.



    Mortality for Infants (under 1 Year of Age)

    Causes of death among persons less than one year of age vary greatly during the first year of life, and therefore special "rates" (actually, ratios) have long been used in public health to provide meaningful indicators of infant mortality. Infant mortality rates are typically calculated as the number of deaths per 1,000 live births.

    Select "Infant Age Groups" for rates calculated using the number live births as the population denominator. The default multiplier for Infant Age Groups (live births population) is 1,000 births. However, the default multiplier for death rates calculated with the population estimate for persons under 1 year of age is 100,000 persons.

    Three commonly used indicators of infant mortality that can be calculated in WONDER are:

    1. Infant Mortality Rate
      Number of deaths of infants (less than 1 year of age of death)
      divided by the number of live births during a given period,
      then multiplied by 1,000;

      (Deaths of persons under 1 year of age) / Live Births) * 1000

    2. Neonatal Mortality Rate
      Number of deaths of infants less than 28 days of age
      divided by the number of live births during a given period,
      then multiplied by 1,000;

      (Deaths of persons under 28 days of age) / Live Births) * 1000

    3. Postneonatal Mortality Rate
      Number of deaths of infants 28 days to 1 year of age
      divided by the number of live births during a given period,
      then multiplied by 1,000.

      (Deaths of persons age 28 days to 1 year of age) / Live Births) * 1000

    Note that all three indicators use the same denominator:   number of live births during a given period.

    To support these and other infant mortality indicators, the online database provides first-year mortality data as follows:

    Infant Age Groups
    less than one day old;
    1 to 6 days old;
    7 to 27 days old;
    and 28 to 364 days old.

    Hints:
    • Select "Infant Age Groups" for rates calculated using the number live births as the population denominator. The default multiplier for Infant Age Groups (live births population) is 1,000 births.
    • The single age group labeled "under 1 of age year" in the standard "Age Groups" list represents the population estimates for this age group.
    • Change the default multiplier for the rate per number of persons in the Additional Rate Options section in section 1 on the Request Form tab.
    Notes:
    • The number of live births are not summed together for the population total when the data are grouped by infant age groups, because the number of live births is used as the population denominator for each infant age group.
    • Age-adjusted rates are not available for the live births population, because each infant age group uses the same population, the number of live births, to produce the age-specific rates.
    • Age-adjusted rates are available for the "under 1 year of age" group, when this group is combined with other age groups. Age-adjusted rates are not calculated for any single age group because the ratio is effectively "1" in this case.
    • Note that rates for infant age groups are not shown for fewer than twenty deaths, nor are race and Hispanic Origin data available, due to privacy constraints; see Assurance of Confidentiality for more information.


    Location Updates: notes about specific county-level changes in boundaries and codes

    Comparable total deaths and death rates may be misleading for counties with changing boundaries. The data collection may lag behind some Federal Information Processing (FIPS) location code changes. Some places, such as independent cities and New York City boroughs are included as unique locations in the data. Some county and census tract area (CA) locations are not included, instead the deaths are associated with a neighboring county or the previous location name and FIPS code. The list below of county-level changes is organized alphabetically by state name and then county name.

    1. Alaska boroughs and census areas:
      Data are available for Alaskan boroughs and census areas, represented by FIPS codes.
      1. Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area, Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Skagway Municipality, Petersburg Borough/Census Area, and Wrangell City and Borough, Alaska Prince of Wales-Outer Ketchikan Census Area, Alaska, Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska and Wrangell-Petersburg Census Area, Alaska
        • Deaths and population data begin on year 2014 for the following areas: Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area, Alaska (FIPS code 02198), Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska (FIPS code 02105), Skagway Municipality, Alaska (FIPS code 02230), Petersburg Borough/Census Area, Alaska (FIPS code 02195) and Wrangell City and Borough, Alaska (FIPS code 02275). Data are only available for these areas for years 2014 and later; deaths and population estimates for years 1999-2013 are missing (zero). Thus, counts and rates shown in multi-year requests for these entities do not include any data for years 1999-2013.
        • Beginning in 2014, deaths and population data are no longer available for the following areas: Prince of Wales-Outer Ketchikan Census Area, Alaska (FIPS code 02201), Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska (FIPS code 02232) and Wrangell-Petersburg Census Area, Alaska (FIPS code 02280). Data are only available for these areas for years 1999-2013; deaths and population estimates for years 2014-2018 are missing (zero). Thus, counts and rates shown in multi-year requests for these entities do not include any data for years 2014-2018.
        • Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska (02105) and Skagway Municipality, Alaska (02230) are formed from the former Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Census Area, Alaska (02232). Petersburg Borough/Census Area, Alaska (FIPS code 02195) and Wrangell City and Borough, Alaska (FIPS code 02275) are formed from the former Wrangell-Petersburg Census Area, Alaska (FIPS code 02280). Prince of Wales-Hyder Census Area, Alaska (FIPS code 02198) is formed from the former Prince of Wales-Outer Ketchikan Census Area, Alaska (FIPS code 02201).
      2. Denali borough, Alaska
        On December 7, 1990, Denali, Alaska(FIPS code 02068) was organized, mostly from the Yukon-Koyukuk census area (FIPS code 02290) with a small part from Southeast Fairbanks (FIPS code 02240). Data for Denali Borough, Alaska (FIPS code 02068) are only available for year 2003 and later; counts and population estimates for years 1999-2002 are missing (zero). Thus, counts and rates shown in multi-year requests for this entity do not include any data for years prior to 2003, only data for 2003 and later. For the years 1999-2002, deaths and population estimates for the area of Denali are recoded to Yukon-Koyukuk (FIPS code 02290).
      3. Yukon-Koyukuk, Alaska
        Yukon-Koyukuk, Alaska (FIPS code 02290) shows a discontinuity in the mortality and population data for Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area (FIPS code 02290) between 2002 and 2003. The discontinuity occurs because part of Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area became Denali Borough, Alaska (FIPS code 02068) and beginning in 2003, deaths and population counts for this former part of Yukon-Koyukuk are reported for Denali Borough and are no longer included with data for Yukon-Koyukuk.
    2. Colorado:
      1. Adams, Colorado
        Adams county, Colorado (FIPS code 08001) shows a discontinuity in the mortality and population data between 2002 and 2003. This discontinuity occurs because territory in each of these four counties has been combined to form a new county, Broomfield, Colorado (FIPS code 08014). Beginning in 2003, deaths and population counts for this territory are reported for Broomfield county and are no longer included with data for Adams county.
      2. Boulder, Colorado
        Boulder county, Colorado (FIPS code 08003) shows a discontinuity in the mortality and population data between 2002 and 2003. This discontinuity occurs because territory in each of these four counties has been combined to form a new county, Broomfield, Colorado (FIPS code 08014). Beginning in 2003, deaths and population counts for this territory are reported for Broomfield county and are no longer included with data for Boulder county.
      3. Broomfield county
        Broomfield county, Colorado (FIPS code 08014) was created effective November 15, 2001 from parts of four counties: Adams, Boulder, Jefferson, and Weld. Deaths and population estimates for Broomfield county appear in the data beginning in the year 2003. Deaths and population estimates before 2003 are coded to the original locations. For years 1999-2002, data for Broomfield county are missing (zero). Thus, counts and rates shown in multi-year requests for this entity do not include any data for years prior to 2003, only data for 2003 and later.
      4. Jefferson, Colorado
        Jefferson county, Colorado (FIPS code 08059) shows a discontinuity in the mortality and population data between 2002 and 2003. This discontinuity occurs because territory in each of these four counties has been combined to form a new county, Broomfield, Colorado (FIPS code 08014). Beginning in 2003, deaths and population counts for this territory are reported for Broomfield county and are no longer included with data for Jefferson county.
      5. Weld, Colorado
        Weld county, Colorado (FIPS code 080123) shows a discontinuity in the mortality and population data between 2002 and 2003. This discontinuity occurs because territory in each of these four counties has been combined to form a new county, Broomfield, Colorado (FIPS code 08014). Beginning in 2003, deaths and population counts for this territory are reported for Broomfield county and are no longer included with data for Weld county.
    3. Florida: Dade county and Miami city
      Dade county, Florida (FIPS code 12025) was renamed Miami-Dade County and its FIPS code changed to 12086, effective November 13, 1997. The new code [12086] is used here.
    4. Maryland: Baltimore city and Baltimore county
      The independent city of Baltimore, Maryland has been treated as a county. Death counts and population estimates are reported separately for Baltimore city (FIPS code 24510) and Baltimore county (FIPS code 24005).
    5. Missouri:
      1. St. Genevieve county, Missouri
        In order to achieve alphabetical consistency, the FIPS code for St. Genevieve, Missouri was changed in 1979 from 29193 to 29186. The new code (29186) is used here.
      2. St. Louis city and St. Louis county, Missouri
        The independent city of St. Louis, Missouri has been treated as a county. Death counts and population estimates are reported separately for St. Louis city (FIPS code 29510) and St. Louis county (FIPS code 29189).
    6. Nevada: Carson City
      The independent city of Carson City, Nevada (FIPS code 32510) has been treated as a county.
    7. New York: New York City boroughs
      The five boroughs of New York City have been treated as counties and reported as separate entities.

      Borough County FIPS Code
      Bronx Bronx 36005
      Brooklyn Kings 36047
      Manhattan New York 36061
      Queens Queens 36081
      Staten Island   Richmond   36085

    8. Virginia independent cities:
      1. Alleghany, Virginia
        Alleghany, Virginia (FIPS code 51005) shows a discontinuity in mortality and population data ) between 2000 and 2001. This discontinuity occurs because beginning in 2001, death counts and population estimates for Clifton Forge city, Virginia (FIPS code 51560) have been combined with those for Alleghany county.
      2. Bedford City, Virginia
        Bedford City, Virginia (FIPS code 51515), formerly an independent city, merged with Bedford County, Virginia (FIPS code 51019) on July 1, 2013. Beginning in year 2014, this change is effective for deaths and population estimates. Deaths and population estimates for Bedford City, Virginia (FIPS code 51515) are only available for the years prior to 2014. Deaths are population estimates are missing (zero) for Bedford City, Virginia beginning in year 2014. Bedford County, Virginia (FIPS code 51019) has a discontinuity in the population estimates between 2013 and 2014 due to the addition of the city population.
      3. Clifton Forge city, Virginia
        On July 1, 2001, Clifton Forge city, Virginia (FIPS code 51560), formerly an independent city, merged with Alleghany county (FIPS code 51005). Deaths and population estimates are available for Clifton Forge city through the year 2000.
      4. Nansemond city, Virginia
        Nansemond city, Virginia (FIPS code 51123) has been part of the independent city of Suffolk, VA (FIPS code 51800) since 1979. For all years, death counts and population estimates for Nansemond have been aggregated with those for Suffolk city.
      5. Table of Virginia independent cities and counties
        The Virginia independent cities are treated as counties and appear on the data with the following FIPS codes:

           Independent City	       County
        

        Name	    FIPS code	Name	    FIPS code   
        

        Alexandria	 51510	Arlington	51013
        Bedford		 51515	Bedford		51019
        Bristol		 51520	Washington	51191
        Buena Vista	 51530	Rockbridge	51163
        Charlottesville	 51540	Albemarle 	51003
        Chesapeake	 51550	
        Clifton Forge	 51560	Alleghany 	51005 
        Colonial Heights 51570	Chesterfield 	51041
        Covington	 51580	Alleghany 	51005
        Danville	 51590	Pittsylvania 	51143
        Emporia		 51595	Greensville	51081
        Fairfax		 51600	Fairfax	 	51059
        Falls Church	 51610	Fairfax 	51059
        Franklin	 51620	Southampton	51175
        Fredericksburg	 51630	Spotsylvania	51177
        Galax		 51640	Grayson 	51077          
        Hampton		 51650
        Harrisonburg	 51660	Rockingham	51165
        Hopewell	 51670	Prince George	51149
        Lexington	 51678	Rockbridge	51163
        Lynchburg	 51680	Campbell 	51031
        Manassas	 51683	Prince William	51153
        Manassas Park	 51685	Prince William	51153
        Martinsville	 51690	Henry	 	51089
        Newport News	 51700
        Norfolk		 51710
        Norton		 51720	Wise	 	51195
        Petersburg	 51730	Dinwiddie	51053
        Poquoson	 51735	York	 	51199
        Portsmouth	 51740	Norfolk city	51710
        Radford		 51750	Montgomery	51121
        Richmond	 51760	Henrico	 	51087
        Roanoke		 51770	Roanoke	 	51161
        Salem		 51775	Roanoke	 	51161
        Staunton	 51790	Augusta	 	51015
        Suffolk		 51800
        Virginia Beach	 51810
        Waynesboro	 51820	Augusta	 	51015
        Williamsburg	 51830	James City	51095
        Winchester	 51840	Frederick	51069
        




This page last reviewed: Wednesday, April 15, 2020
This information is provided as technical reference material. Please contact us at cwus@cdc.gov.