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Data InsightsChild deaths outnumber homicides in the United States, but get far less public attention

Child deaths outnumber homicides in the United States, but get far less public attention

Child deaths outnumber homicide deaths in the United States.

Two-column bar chart comparing annual deaths (data for 2023). Left column: "Child deaths (under-15s, all causes)" — 30,200 deaths. Right column: "Homicides (all ages)" — 22,800 deaths. Subtitle notes that everyday tragedies of children dying from preterm birth, sepsis, and asphyxia receive far less media and public attention. Note: numbers rounded; approximately 1,000 child deaths were by homicide and are included in both columns. Data sources: UN IGME for child deaths; US CDC for homicides.

It’s a widespread view that child deaths are still a pressing problem in poorer countries, but not in rich ones.

I don’t think this is true, and I want to illustrate it with one example from the United States.

In 2023, 30,200 children died in the US. In the same year, 22,800 Americans of any age were killed through homicide. You can see this in the chart.

Few Americans would argue that murders are a “solved problem”. And this is certainly not what you’d take away from the news. As we showed in a recent article, homicides receive disproportionate coverage in both left- and right-leaning media, relative to the number of people who die from them.

The everyday tragedies of children dying from preterm births, neonatal sepsis, and asphyxia do not get nearly the same attention, but are no less important. These are problems that we can still make more progress on.

I’ve recently written about what high-income countries can do to continue reducing child deaths.

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