Deaths: Final Data for 2012.

OBJECTIVES This report presents final 2012 data on U.S. deaths, death rates, life expectancy, infant mortality, and trends by selected characteristics such as age, sex, Hispanic origin, race, state of residence, and cause of death. METHODS Information reported on death certificates, which is completed by funeral directors, attending physicians, medical examiners, and coroners, is presented in descriptive tabulations. The original records are filed in state registration offices. Statistical information is compiled in a national database through the Vital Statistics Cooperative Program of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Health Statistics. Causes of death are processed in accordance with the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision. RESULTS In 2012, a total of 2,543,279 deaths were reported in the United States. The age-adjusted death rate was 732.8 deaths per 100,000 U.S. standard population, a decrease of 1.1% from the 2011 rate and a record low figure. Life expectancy at birth rose 0.1 year, from 78.7 years in 2011 to a record high of 78.8 in 2012. Age-specific death rates decreased in 2012 from 2011 for age groups 5-14, 15-24, 45-54, 65-74, 75-84, and 85 and over. Age-specific death rates increased only for age group 55-64. The leading causes of death in 2012 remained the same as in 2011. The infant mortality rate of 5.98 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2012 was a historically low value, but it was not significantly different from the 2011 rate. CONCLUSIONS The decline of the age-adjusted death rate to a record low value for the United States, and the increase in life expectancy to a record high value of 78.8 years, are consistent with long-term trends in mortality.

[1]  P. Sorlie,et al.  Validity of demographic characteristics on the death certificate. , 1992, Epidemiology.

[2]  L. Mascola,et al.  Increase in Clostridium difficile–related Mortality Rates, United States, 1999–2004 , 2007, Emerging infectious diseases.

[3]  S Quick,et al.  International data base. , 1984, POPIN bulletin.

[4]  C. Berg,et al.  An assessment of pregnancy-related mortality in the United States. , 2005, Paediatric and perinatal epidemiology.

[5]  D. Ng-Mak,et al.  The Latino mortality paradox: a test of the "salmon bias" and healthy migrant hypotheses. , 1999, American journal of public health.

[6]  N. Schenker,et al.  On Judging the Significance of Differences by Examining the Overlap Between Confidence Intervals , 2001 .

[7]  J. Mclaughlin,et al.  Comparability of the death certificate and the 1986 National Mortality Followback Survey. , 1993, Vital and health statistics. Series 2, Data evaluation and methods research.

[8]  P. Sorlie,et al.  Validity of education information on the death certificate. , 1996, Epidemiology.

[9]  E. Arias,et al.  The Hispanic mortality advantage and ethnic misclassification on US death certificates. , 2010, American journal of public health.

[10]  R A Israel,et al.  Analytical potential for multiple cause-of-death data. , 1986, American journal of epidemiology.

[11]  Nathaniel Schenker,et al.  From single‐race reporting to multiple‐race reporting: using imputation methods to bridge the transition , 2003, Statistics in medicine.

[12]  Klebba Aj,et al.  Comparability of mortality statistics for the seventh and eighth revisions of the international classification of diseases, United States. , 1975 .

[13]  Sunenshine Rh,et al.  Clostridium difficile-associated disease: new challenges from an established pathogen. , 2006 .

[14]  D. Brillinger,et al.  The natural variability of vital rates and associated statistics. , 1986, Biometrics.

[15]  D. Cheng,et al.  Effectiveness of Pregnancy Check Boxes on Death Certificates in Identifying Pregnancy-Associated Mortality , 2011, Public health reports.

[16]  E. Arias,et al.  Paradox lost: Explaining the hispanic adult mortality advantage , 2004, Demography.

[17]  E. Feuer,et al.  Confidence intervals for directly standardized rates: a method based on the gamma distribution. , 1997, Statistics in medicine.

[18]  James Waterman Glover United States Life Tables , 2013 .