Murder knocked off list of top U.S. killers – CDC

CHICAGO, (Reuters) – A respiratory illness that  strikes the elderly knocked homicide off the list of the top  killers in the United States for the first time in 45 years in  2010, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said yesterday.

In its annual report on U.S. mortality, the CDC said a  condition known as pneumonitis had replaced murder as one of the  Top 15 causes of death in the country, knocking homicide to 16th  place in the list of top killers. It was the first time since  1965 that murder didn’t make the Top 15.

Overall, the CDC said age-adjusted death rates fell in 2010  to their lowest level in the 61 years the health agency has been  tracking the data. But the big killers stalking the United  States remained the same with heart disease and cancer  continuing to account for nearly half the deaths.     The drop in deaths by homicides was expected. Last month, the  FBI released a preliminary report on U.S. crime rates for 2010  that showed a 7.1 percent drop in murder between January and  June, part of a wider drop in violent crime despite the  country’s ongoing economic troubles.

The drop in murder rates — and a corresponding rise in  pneumonitis — forced homicide off the government’s annual list  of top 15 killers for the first time since the mid-1960s. Murder  was relegated to 16th place in 2010 with 16,065 killings.

Average life expectancy in the United States rose slightly  in 2010, to 78.7 years from 78.6 in 2009, the CDC said. In order  to reach that age, Americans had to dodge a litany of potential  killers, top among them heart disease and cancer.