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In 2000, the top
three killers were chronic, noncommunicable diseases - causes of death well
known to all of us: heart disease, cancer, and stroke. Although not shown in
this table, if you combine deaths due to accidents, homicide and suicide
then injury becomes the third leading cause of death, just ahead of stroke.
“Accident” is really a term to avoid because it implies fatalism and
helplessness. Epidemiologists strongly prefer the term unintentional injury
to accidental injury. This is because such injury is both predictable and
preventable at the level of populations or groups, if not for given
individuals. |