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Health Status > Adolescents
ADOLESCENT MORTALITY
In 2003, 13,595 deaths were reported of adolescents
aged 15-19 years. After a moderate increase for this age group in
the early 1980s, death rates have since gradually declined. Unintentional
injury remains the leading cause of death among this age group and
accounted for approximately 50 percent of all deaths among adolescents
15-19 years of age in 2003. Homicide and suicide were the next leading
causes of death, accounting for 14 and 11 percent, respectively,
of all deaths within this age group.
Deaths Due to Injury. Within
the classification of deaths due to injury or other external causes,
motor vehicle crashes were the leading cause of mortality among
15- to 19-year-olds in 2003, and accounted for 50 percent of injury-related
deaths among adolescents. Alcohol is a significant contributor to
these deaths; nearly one-third of adolescent drivers killed in crashes
had been drinking. Firearms were the next leading cause of injury
death, accounting for 29 percent of injury-related deaths in this
age group. Adolescent death rates due to motor vehicle injuries
and firearms were similar in the early 1990s until 1994, when they
began to diverge. The rate of adolescent firearm deaths was recorded
at 12.1 per 100,000 population in 2003, less than half the rate
of motor vehicle injury deaths of 25.2 per 100,000.
> Horizontal
Bar Chart: Leading Causes of Death Among Adolescents Ages
15-19: 2003
>
Horizontal Bar Chart: Deaths Due to Injury Among Adolescents
Ages 15-19: 2003
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