86 datasets found
  1. NCHS - Injury Mortality: United States

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.virginia.gov
    • +8more
    Updated Apr 23, 2025
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    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2025). NCHS - Injury Mortality: United States [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/nchs-injury-mortality-united-states
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    Dataset updated
    Apr 23, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Disease Control and Preventionhttp://www.cdc.gov/
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    This dataset describes injury mortality in the United States beginning in 1999. Two concepts are included in the circumstances of an injury death: intent of injury and mechanism of injury. Intent of injury describes whether the injury was inflicted purposefully (intentional injury) and, if purposeful, whether the injury was self-inflicted (suicide or self-harm) or inflicted by another person (homicide). Injuries that were not purposefully inflicted are considered unintentional (accidental) injuries. Mechanism of injury describes the source of the energy transfer that resulted in physical or physiological harm to the body. Examples of mechanisms of injury include falls, motor vehicle traffic crashes, burns, poisonings, and drownings (1,2). Data are based on information from all resident death certificates filed in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. Age-adjusted death rates (per 100,000 standard population) are based on the 2000 U.S. standard population. Populations used for computing death rates for 2011–2015 are postcensal estimates based on the 2010 census, estimated as of July 1, 2010. Rates for census years are based on populations enumerated in the corresponding censuses. Rates for non-census years before 2010 are revised using updated intercensal population estimates and may differ from rates previously published. Causes of injury death are classified by the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD–10). Categories of injury intent and injury mechanism generally follow the categories in the external-cause-of-injury mortality matrix (1,2). Cause-of-death statistics are based on the underlying cause of death. SOURCES CDC/NCHS, National Vital Statistics System, mortality data (see http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/deaths.htm); and CDC WONDER (see http://wonder.cdc.gov). REFERENCES National Center for Health Statistics. ICD–10: External cause of injury mortality matrix. National Center for Health Statistics. Vital statistics data available. Mortality multiple cause files. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. Available from: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data_access/vitalstatsonline.htm. Murphy SL, Xu JQ, Kochanek KD, Curtin SC, and Arias E. Deaths: Final data for 2015. National vital statistics reports; vol 66. no. 6. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2017. Available from: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr66/nvsr66_06.pdf. Miniño AM, Anderson RN, Fingerhut LA, Boudreault MA, Warner M. Deaths: Injuries, 2002. National vital statistics reports; vol 54 no 10. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2006.

  2. TBI Hospitalizations/Deaths

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Jan 28, 2023
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    The Devastator (2023). TBI Hospitalizations/Deaths [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/thedevastator/tbi-hospitalizations-deaths
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    zip(590 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 28, 2023
    Authors
    The Devastator
    Description

    TBI Hospitalizations/Deaths

    A 2001-2010 Study of U.S. Rates

    By Health [source]

    About this dataset

    This dataset examines the troubling national rise in traumatic brain injury (TBI)-related emergency department (ED) visits, hospitalizations and deaths over the past decade. While TBI-related ED visits make up a large share of this increase, rates of hospitalizations related to TBI remain relatively stable. The total combined rate of all three categories steadily increased from 521.0 per 100,000 people in 2001 to 823.7 per 100,000 people in 2010 – an alarming 57% rise that demands our attention and rapid solutions in order to reverse this trend. Not only is the sudden spike concerning but so too is the slightly decreasing rates for TBI-related deaths which dropped from 18.5 per 100,000 to 17.1 per 100,000 over this time period despite overall numbers continuing to climb upwards with no sign of slowing down soon. Have a look at this dataset and explore what we can do together to work towards a healthier future free of needless fatalities caused by preventable injuries such as those related to TBIs

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    How to use the dataset

    • Take a look at the Total column – it combines all 3 types of hospitalization numbers (Emergency Department Visits, Hospitalizations and Deaths) together into one figure per year. This makes it easy to see what the overall rate over time has been.

    • The Emergency Department Visits, Hospitalizations and Deaths columns can be used individually as well – view them separately on their own scales so you can better compare them against each other year by year.

    • Use filtering tools or visualizations tools if you’d like to dive deeper into each figure separately in order to pinpoint trends or changes in any particular subcategory more closely.

    • The data is displayed historically; however, use math operations such as averaging or percentage increases/decreases across different years if you’d like analyze trends over time more broadly

    Research Ideas

    • To compare the rate of TBI-related hospitalizations, ED visits and deaths between states/countries/age groups.
    • To create a visual representation (i.e., an infographic) to track TBI-related hospitalization, ED visit and death rates over the past decade in order to inform public health initiatives.
    • To study the effect of investments made in prevention programs on the rate of TBI-related hospitalizations, ED visits and deaths in different regions or cities over time

    Acknowledgements

    If you use this dataset in your research, please credit the original authors. Data Source

    License

    License: Dataset copyright by authors - You are free to: - Share - copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format for any purpose, even commercially. - Adapt - remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercially. - You must: - Give appropriate credit - Provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. - ShareAlike - You must distribute your contributions under the same license as the original. - Keep intact - all notices that refer to this license, including copyright notices.

    Columns

    File: Rates_of_TBI-related_Emergency_Department_Visits_Hospitalizations_and_Deaths_United_States_2001_2010.csv | Column name | Description | |:--------------------------------|:------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | Year | Year of the data point. (Integer) | | Emergency Department Visits | Number of TBI-related emergency department visits per 100,000 people. (Float) | | Hospitalizations | Number of TBI-related hospitalizations per 100,000 people. (Float) | | Deaths | Number of TBI-related deaths per 100,000 people. (Float) | | Total | Total number of TBI-related ED visits, hospitalizations, and deaths per 100,000 people. (Float) |

    Acknowledgements

    If you use this dataset in your research, please credit the original authors. If you use this dataset in your research, please credit Health.

  3. e

    The Labour Inspection Authority’s statistics on occupational injury deaths...

    • data.europa.eu
    unknown
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    The Labour Inspection Authority’s statistics on occupational injury deaths by month [Dataset]. https://data.europa.eu/88u/dataset/https-data-norge-no-node-3174
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    unknownAvailable download formats
    License

    http://spdx.org/licenses/NLOD-2.0http://spdx.org/licenses/NLOD-2.0

    Description

    Here you will find an open data set with the Labour Inspection Authority’s statistics on occupational injury deaths per year for the last five-year period. The Working Environment Act & 5-2 requires employers to notify the Labour Inspection Authority of serious work-related personal injuries to their own employees. Occupational injury death means a work injury that causes the injured employee to die within one year of the accident. The Labour Inspection Authority provides statistics on occupational injury deaths occurring within the Labour Inspection Authority’s administrative area that is limited to the land-based labour market in Norway. Occupational injury deaths in aviation, shipping, fishing and capture, petroleum activities on the Norwegian continental shelf and the construction and operation of land-based petroleum facilities are followed up by other supervisory authorities. Occupational injury deaths in these industries are therefore not included in these statistics. Occupational injury deaths in military occupations are included, with the exception of deaths in war situations. For more information about the data set read here. The open data set consists of: Year (Ar), Monthly name (Maned), Number of occupational injury deaths (Number)

  4. d

    Road Traffic Injuries

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +3more
    Updated Nov 23, 2025
    + more versions
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    California Department of Public Health (2025). Road Traffic Injuries [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/road-traffic-injuries-0935b
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 23, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    California Department of Public Health
    Description

    This table contains data on the annual number of fatal and severe road traffic injuries per population and per miles traveled by transport mode, for California, its regions, counties, county divisions, cities/towns, and census tracts. Injury data is from the Statewide Integrated Traffic Records System (SWITRS), California Highway Patrol (CHP), 2002-2010 data from the Transportation Injury Mapping System (TIMS) . The table is part of a series of indicators in the [Healthy Communities Data and Indicators Project of the Office of Health Equity]. Transportation accidents are the second leading cause of death in California for people under the age of 45 and account for an average of 4,018 deaths per year (2006-2010). Risks of injury in traffic collisions are greatest for motorcyclists, pedestrians, and bicyclists and lowest for bus and rail passengers. Minority communities bear a disproportionate share of pedestrian-car fatalities; Native American male pedestrians experience 4 times the death rate as Whites or Asians, and African-Americans and Latinos experience twice the rate as Whites or Asians. More information about the data table and a data dictionary can be found in the About/Attachments section.

  5. VDH Injury Deaths By Age Category and Sex

    • data.virginia.gov
    csv
    Updated Sep 12, 2024
    + more versions
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    Virginia Department of Health (2024). VDH Injury Deaths By Age Category and Sex [Dataset]. https://data.virginia.gov/dataset/vdh-injury-deaths-by-age-category-and-sex
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    csv(65237)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 12, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Virginia Department of Healthhttps://www.vdh.virginia.gov/
    Description

    This dataset includes the count and rate per 100,000 Virginia residents of injury deaths among Virginia residents, only whether or not they died in state. City/county is based on the place of residence at time of death. Deaths are counted from vital records death certificate data. Data set includes injury death counts and rates for years 2018 through the most recent data year available. When data set is downloaded, the years will be sorted in ascending order, meaning that the earliest year will be at the top. To see data for the most recent year, please scroll down to the bottom of the data set.

  6. C

    Death Profiles by County

    • data.chhs.ca.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +3more
    csv, zip
    Updated Nov 26, 2025
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    California Department of Public Health (2025). Death Profiles by County [Dataset]. https://data.chhs.ca.gov/dataset/death-profiles-by-county
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    csv(74351424), csv(75015194), csv(11738570), csv(1128641), csv(15127221), csv(60517511), csv(73906266), csv(60201673), csv(60676655), csv(28125832), csv(60023260), csv(51592721), csv(74689382), csv(52019564), csv(5095), csv(74043128), csv(24235858), csv(74497014), zip, csv(29775349)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 26, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Public Health
    Description

    This dataset contains counts of deaths for California counties based on information entered on death certificates. Final counts are derived from static data and include out-of-state deaths to California residents, whereas provisional counts are derived from incomplete and dynamic data. Provisional counts are based on the records available when the data was retrieved and may not represent all deaths that occurred during the time period. Deaths involving injuries from external or environmental forces, such as accidents, homicide and suicide, often require additional investigation that tends to delay certification of the cause and manner of death. This can result in significant under-reporting of these deaths in provisional data.

    The final data tables include both deaths that occurred in each California county regardless of the place of residence (by occurrence) and deaths to residents of each California county (by residence), whereas the provisional data table only includes deaths that occurred in each county regardless of the place of residence (by occurrence). The data are reported as totals, as well as stratified by age, gender, race-ethnicity, and death place type. Deaths due to all causes (ALL) and selected underlying cause of death categories are provided. See temporal coverage for more information on which combinations are available for which years.

    The cause of death categories are based solely on the underlying cause of death as coded by the International Classification of Diseases. The underlying cause of death is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as "the disease or injury which initiated the train of events leading directly to death, or the circumstances of the accident or violence which produced the fatal injury." It is a single value assigned to each death based on the details as entered on the death certificate. When more than one cause is listed, the order in which they are listed can affect which cause is coded as the underlying cause. This means that similar events could be coded with different underlying causes of death depending on variations in how they were entered. Consequently, while underlying cause of death provides a convenient comparison between cause of death categories, it may not capture the full impact of each cause of death as it does not always take into account all conditions contributing to the death.

  7. VDH Injury Deaths By Year and County

    • data.virginia.gov
    • opendata.winchesterva.gov
    csv
    Updated Sep 12, 2024
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    Virginia Department of Health (2024). VDH Injury Deaths By Year and County [Dataset]. https://data.virginia.gov/dataset/vdh-injury-deaths-by-year-and-county
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    csv(44715)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 12, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Virginia Department of Healthhttps://www.vdh.virginia.gov/
    Description

    This dataset includes the count and rate per 100,000 Virginia residents of injury deaths among Virginia residents, only whether or not they died in state. City/county is based on the place of residence at time of death. Deaths are counted from vital records death certificate data. Data set includes injury death counts and rates for years 2018 through the most recent data year available. When data set is downloaded, the years will be sorted in ascending order, meaning that the earliest year will be at the top. To see data for the most recent year, please scroll down to the bottom of the data set.

  8. d

    Death Profiles by Leading Causes of Death

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.chhs.ca.gov
    • +4more
    Updated Nov 23, 2025
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    California Department of Public Health (2025). Death Profiles by Leading Causes of Death [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/death-profiles-by-leading-causes-of-death-35077
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 23, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    California Department of Public Health
    Description

    Data for deaths by leading cause of death categories are now available in the death profiles dataset for each geographic granularity. The cause of death categories are based solely on the underlying cause of death as coded by the International Classification of Diseases. The underlying cause of death is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as "the disease or injury which initiated the train of events leading directly to death, or the circumstances of the accident or violence which produced the fatal injury." It is a single value assigned to each death based on the details as entered on the death certificate. When more than one cause is listed, the order in which they are listed can affect which cause is coded as the underlying cause. This means that similar events could be coded with different underlying causes of death depending on variations in how they were entered. Consequently, while underlying cause of death provides a convenient comparison between cause of death categories, it may not capture the full impact of each cause of death as it does not always take into account all conditions contributing to the death. Cause of death categories for years 1999 and later are based on tenth revision of International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) codes. Comparable categories are provided for years 1979 through 1998 based on ninth revision (ICD-9) codes. For more information on the comparability of cause of death classification between ICD revisions see Comparability of Cause-of-death Between ICD Revisions.

  9. d

    Traffic Crashes Resulting in Fatality

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.sfgov.org
    • +2more
    Updated Nov 8, 2025
    + more versions
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    data.sfgov.org (2025). Traffic Crashes Resulting in Fatality [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/traffic-crashes-resulting-in-fatality
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 8, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    data.sfgov.org
    Description

    A. SUMMARY This table contains all fatalities resulting from a traffic crash in the City of San Francisco. Fatality year-to-date crash data is obtained from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OME) death records, and only includes those cases that meet the San Francisco Vision Zero Fatality Protocol maintained by the San Francisco Department of Public Health (SFDPH), San Francisco Police Department (SFPD), and San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA). Injury crash data is obtained from SFPD’s Interim Collision System for 2018 to YTD, Crossroads Software Traffic Collision Database (CR) for years 2013-2017 and the Statewide Integrated Transportation Record System (SWITRS) maintained by the California Highway Patrol for all years prior to 2013. Only crashes with valid geographic information are mapped. All geocodable crash data is represented on the simplified San Francisco street centerline model maintained by the Department of Public Works (SFDPW). Collision injury data is queried and aggregated on a quarterly basis. Crashes occurring at complex intersections with multiple roadways are mapped onto a single point and injury and fatality crashes occurring on highways are excluded. The fatality table contains information about each party injured or killed in the collision, including any passengers. B. HOW THE DATASET IS CREATED Traffic crash injury data is collected from the California Highway Patrol 555 Crash Report as submitted by the police officer within 30 days after the crash occurred. All fields that match the SWITRS data schema are programmatically extracted, de-identified, geocoded, and loaded into TransBASE. See Section D below for details regarding TransBASE. This table is filtered for fatal traffic crashes. C. UPDATE PROCESS After review by SFPD and SFDPH staff, the data is made publicly available approximately a month after the end of the previous quarter (May for Q1, August for Q2, November for Q3, and February for Q4). D. HOW TO USE THIS DATASET This data is being provided as public information as defined under San Francisco and California public records laws. SFDPH, SFMTA, and SFPD cannot limit or restrict the use of this data or its interpretation by other parties in any way. Where the data is communicated, distributed, reproduced, mapped, or used in any other way, the user should acknowledge the Vision Zero initiative and the TransBASE database as the source of the data, provide a reference to the original data source where also applicable, include the date the data was pulled, and note any caveats specified in the associated metadata documentation provided. However, users should not attribute their analysis or interpretation of this data to the City of San Francisco. While the data has been collected and/or produced for the use of the City of San Francisco, it cannot guarantee its accuracy or completeness. Accordingly, the City of San Francisco, including SFDPH, SFMTA, and SFPD make no representation as to the accuracy of the information or its suitability for any purpose and disclaim any liability for omissions or errors that may be contained therein. As all data is associated with methodological assumptions and limitations, the City recommends that users review methodological documentation associated with the data prior to its analysis, interpretation, or communication. TransBASE is a geospatially enabled database maintained by SFDPH that currently includes over 200 spatially referenced variables from multiple agencies and across a range of geographic scales, including infrastructure, transportation, zoning, sociodemographic, and collision data, all linked to an intersection or street segment. TransBASE facilitates a data-driven approach to understanding and addressing transportation-related health issues, informed by a large and growing evidence base regarding the importance of transportation system design and land u

  10. u

    Suicide & Self-Inflicted Injury death rates by county, 2019-2023 - Dataset -...

    • midb.uspatial.umn.edu
    Updated Oct 24, 2025
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    (2025). Suicide & Self-Inflicted Injury death rates by county, 2019-2023 - Dataset - Healthy Communities Data Portal [Dataset]. https://midb.uspatial.umn.edu/hcdp/dataset/suicide-self-inflicted-injury-death-rates-by-county-2019-2023
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 24, 2025
    Description

    Suicide & Self-Inflicted Injury death rates by county, all races (includes Hispanic/Latino), all sexes, all ages, 2019-2023. Death data were provided by the National Vital Statistics System. Death rates (deaths per 100,000 population per year) are age-adjusted to the 2000 US standard population (20 age groups: <1, 1-4, 5-9, ... , 80-84, 85-89, 90+). Rates calculated using SEER*Stat. Population counts for denominators are based on Census populations as modified by the National Cancer Institute. The US Population Data File is used for mortality data. The Average Annual Percent Change is based onthe APCs calculated by the Joinpoint Regression Program (Version 4.9.0.0). Due to data availability issues, the time period used in the calculation of the joinpoint regression model may differ for selected counties. Counties with a (3) after their name may have their joinpoint regresssion model calculated using a different time period due to data availability issues.

  11. Rates of TBI-related Deaths by Age Group - United States, 2001 - 2010

    • data.cdc.gov
    • data.virginia.gov
    • +4more
    csv, xlsx, xml
    Updated Apr 1, 2014
    + more versions
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    CDC National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention (2014). Rates of TBI-related Deaths by Age Group - United States, 2001 - 2010 [Dataset]. https://data.cdc.gov/Traumatic-Brain-Injury-/Rates-of-TBI-related-Deaths-by-Age-Group-United-St/nq6q-szvs
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    csv, xml, xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Apr 1, 2014
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Disease Control and Preventionhttp://www.cdc.gov/
    National Center for Injury Prevention and Control
    Authors
    CDC National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention
    License

    U.S. Government Workshttps://www.usa.gov/government-works
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    Changes in the rates of TBI-related deaths vary depending on age. For persons 44 years of age and younger, TBI-related deaths decreased between the periods of 2001-2002 and 2009-2010. Rates for age groups 45-64 years of age remained stable for this same ten-year period. For persons 65 years and older, rates of TBI-related deaths increased during this time period, from 41.2 to 45.2 deaths per 100,000.Go to http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury/data/index.html to view more TBI data & statistics.Source: http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury/data/rates_deaths_byage.html

  12. Statewide Death Profiles

    • data.chhs.ca.gov
    • data.ca.gov
    • +3more
    csv, zip
    Updated Dec 2, 2025
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    California Department of Public Health (2025). Statewide Death Profiles [Dataset]. https://data.chhs.ca.gov/dataset/statewide-death-profiles
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    csv(4689434), csv(164006), csv(5034), csv(476576), csv(2026589), csv(5401561), csv(463460), csv(419332), csv(200270), csv(16301), zipAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Dec 2, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    California Department of Public Healthhttps://www.cdph.ca.gov/
    Description

    This dataset contains counts of deaths for California as a whole based on information entered on death certificates. Final counts are derived from static data and include out-of-state deaths to California residents, whereas provisional counts are derived from incomplete and dynamic data. Provisional counts are based on the records available when the data was retrieved and may not represent all deaths that occurred during the time period. Deaths involving injuries from external or environmental forces, such as accidents, homicide and suicide, often require additional investigation that tends to delay certification of the cause and manner of death. This can result in significant under-reporting of these deaths in provisional data.

    The final data tables include both deaths that occurred in California regardless of the place of residence (by occurrence) and deaths to California residents (by residence), whereas the provisional data table only includes deaths that occurred in California regardless of the place of residence (by occurrence). The data are reported as totals, as well as stratified by age, gender, race-ethnicity, and death place type. Deaths due to all causes (ALL) and selected underlying cause of death categories are provided. See temporal coverage for more information on which combinations are available for which years.

    The cause of death categories are based solely on the underlying cause of death as coded by the International Classification of Diseases. The underlying cause of death is defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as "the disease or injury which initiated the train of events leading directly to death, or the circumstances of the accident or violence which produced the fatal injury." It is a single value assigned to each death based on the details as entered on the death certificate. When more than one cause is listed, the order in which they are listed can affect which cause is coded as the underlying cause. This means that similar events could be coded with different underlying causes of death depending on variations in how they were entered. Consequently, while underlying cause of death provides a convenient comparison between cause of death categories, it may not capture the full impact of each cause of death as it does not always take into account all conditions contributing to the death.

  13. Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses (SOII)

    • catalog.data.gov
    • s.cnmilf.com
    Updated May 16, 2022
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    Bureau of Labor Statistics (2022). Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses (SOII) [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/survey-of-occupational-injuries-and-illnesses-soii-fc31f
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    Dataset updated
    May 16, 2022
    Dataset provided by
    Bureau of Labor Statisticshttp://www.bls.gov/
    Description

    The Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses (SOII) is a Federal/State cooperative program that publishes estimates on nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses. Each year, approximately 200,000 employers report for establishments in private industry and the public sector (state and local government). In-scope cases include work-related injuries or illnesses to workers who require medical care beyond first aid. See the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) for the entire recordkeeping guidelines. The SOII excludes all work–related fatalities as well as nonfatal work injuries and illnesses to the self–employed; to workers on farms with 10 or fewer employees; to private household workers; to volunteers; and to federal government workers. More information and details about the data provided can be found at https://www.bls.gov/iif/soii-overview.htm

  14. Road Traffic Injuries in California

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Jan 28, 2023
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    The Devastator (2023). Road Traffic Injuries in California [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/thedevastator/road-traffic-injuries-in-california
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    zip(10338749 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 28, 2023
    Authors
    The Devastator
    License

    Open Database License (ODbL) v1.0https://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/1.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    California
    Description

    Road Traffic Injuries in California

    Pedestrian Fatalities and Injury Rates By Transport Mode, 2002-2010

    By Health [source]

    About this dataset

    This table contains data on the number of annual fatal and severe road traffic injuries per population and per miles traveled by transport mode, for the state of California and its various regions, counties, county divisions, cities/towns, and census tracts. Road traffic injury is an important public health issue in California; it ranks second among leading causes of death for people under 45 in the state with an average of 4,018 fatalities per year (2006-2010). In addition to this terrible statistic are also elevated risks for certain population subgroups; Native American male pedestrians experience 4 times the death rate as Whites or Asians while African-Americans and Latinos experience twice the death rate as Whites or Asians.

    This dataset has been generated through a combination of datasets--SWITRS (Statewide Integrated Traffic Records System), CHP (California Highway Patrol), 2002-2010 data from TIMS (Transportation Injury Mapping System)--and presents itself as part of a healthy community indicators project from the Office of Health Equity. By looking at this data users can learn about which communities are bearing a disproportionate share in terms of pedestrian/car fatalities due to road traffic injuries without taking into account additional factors such as socioeconomic status or gender. Through understanding these statistics more accurately we can begin to take steps towards promoting safe transportation practices across all communities

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    Featured Notebooks

    • 🚨 Your notebook can be here! 🚨!

    How to use the dataset

    Welcome to the Road Traffic Injury dataset! This dataset contains information on the annual number of fatal and severe road traffic injuries per population and per miles traveled by transport mode in California from 2002-2010. We hope that this data will be useful to you in understanding trends, evaluating safety policies, and tracking changes in transportation safety over time.

    In this guide, we’ll provide an overview of the dataset so you can start making use of it. We’ll cover what each column means and how you can use them for further analysis and exploration.

    The columns in this dataset include detailed information about each road traffic injury event: - ind_definition: Definition of the indicator – i.e., whether it is a rate (per population) or a risk ratio (relative to some reference group).
    - reportyear: Year of the report; - race_eth_code/name: Race/ethnicity code and name provided;
    - geotype/value/name: Type of geographic area included as well as its corresponding value or name; - county_fips/name: FIPS code for counties, as well as their corresponding names;

    • region_code/name: Region codes with accompanying region names provided respectively;

    • mode: Mode of transportation associated with these events (motorcycles, pedestrians, buses & rail passengers);

    • severity : Severity level (fatal or severe);

      • 11): Number of injuries occurring within that time period within each race ethinic category (injuries, totalpop [its total population], poprate [the rate by which there are injuries happening]) ;

    12)- 15): Confidence Intervals associated with 95% Lower & Upper Limits (LL 95CI [Lower than 95% range] & UL95CI [Upper than 95% range]) by population rates (poprate) & miles traveled rates (avmtrate)

    16): Standard Error Rates calculated by both Population Rate(poprate) & Miles Traveled Rate(amtrate) ; 19), 20), 23)}: Relative Risk Ration Rates providing values compared bottom line across geographic regions respectively {Population Rate(CA RR poprate), Miles Traveled Rate()) ; 21), 22}, 24), 25 => Decile Rankings arranging breakdowns from 1-10 into 10 respective categories calculations

    Research Ideas

    • The dataset can be used to develop maps that show impact of traffic injuries in different areas by race, geotype and mode.
    • It can be used to measure the performance of safety improvement interventions by comparing changes in injury rates at certain county or cities before and after safety tactics have been implemented.
    • It could also be used to study the effects of individual driving behaviors on collision related injury rates by analyzing data from counties with disparate levels of enforcement

    Acknowledgements

    If you use this dataset in your research, please credit the original authors. Data Source

    &g...

  15. Rates of TBI-related Emergency Department Visits, Hospitalizations, and...

    • catalog.data.gov
    • data.virginia.gov
    • +5more
    Updated Jun 28, 2025
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    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2025). Rates of TBI-related Emergency Department Visits, Hospitalizations, and Deaths - United States, 2001 – 2010 [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/rates-of-tbi-related-emergency-department-visits-hospitalizations-and-deaths-united-s-2001-36cef
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 28, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Centers for Disease Control and Preventionhttp://www.cdc.gov/
    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    In general, total combined rates for traumatic brain injury (TBI)-related emergency department (ED) visits, hospitalizations and deaths have increased over the past decade. Total combined rates of TBI-related hospitalizations, ED visits, and deaths climbed slowly from a rate of 521.0 per 100,000 in 2001 to 615.7 per 100,000 in 2005. The rates then dipped to 595.1 per 100,000 in 2006 and 566.7 per 100,000 in 2007. The rates then spiked sharply in 2008 and continued to climb through 2010 to a rate of 823.7 per 100,000. Total combined rates of TBI-related hospitalizations, ED visits, and deaths are driven in large part by the relatively high number of TBI-related ED visits. In comparison to ED visits, the overall rates of TBI-related hospitalizations remained relatively stable changing from 82.7 per 100,000 in 2001 to 91.7 per 100,000 in 2010. TBI-related deaths also decreased slightly over time from 18.5 per 100,000 in 2001 to 17.1 per 100,000 in 2010. Note that the axis scale for TBI-related deaths appears to the right of the chart and differs from TBI-related hospitalizations and ED visits.Go to http://www.cdc.gov/traumaticbraininjury/data/index.html to view more TBI data & statistics.

  16. Leading causes of injury death

    • data-sccphd.opendata.arcgis.com
    • hub.arcgis.com
    Updated Feb 23, 2018
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    Santa Clara County Public Health (2018). Leading causes of injury death [Dataset]. https://data-sccphd.opendata.arcgis.com/datasets/leading-causes-of-injury-death
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    Dataset updated
    Feb 23, 2018
    Dataset provided by
    Santa Clara County Public Health Departmenthttps://publichealth.sccgov.org/
    Authors
    Santa Clara County Public Health
    License

    MIT Licensehttps://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Earth
    Description

    Leading causes of injury death (by percentage) by sex, race/ethnicity, age; trends if available. Source: Santa Clara County Public Health Department, VRBIS, 2007-2016. Data as of 05/26/2017.METADATA:Notes (String): Lists table title, notes and sourcesYear (Numeric): Year of dataCategory (String): Lists the category representing the data: Santa Clara County is for total population, sex: Male and Female, race/ethnicity: African American, Asian/Pacific Islander, Latino and White (non-Hispanic White only); age categories as follows: <1, 1 to 14, 15 to 24, 25 to 44, 45 to 64, 65 and older.Causes of injury death (String): Leading causes of injury deathPercent (Numeric): Percentage is the number of injury deaths from specified cause per 100 deaths in a year

  17. o

    Occupational Health and Safety worker fatality and critical injury counts...

    • data.ontario.ca
    • open.canada.ca
    csv
    Updated Oct 22, 2025
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    Labour, Training and Skills Development (2025). Occupational Health and Safety worker fatality and critical injury counts report [Dataset]. https://data.ontario.ca/dataset/occupational-health-and-safety-worker-fatality-and-critical-injury-counts-report
    Explore at:
    csv(418), csv(343)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 22, 2025
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Labour, Training and Skills Development
    License

    https://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontariohttps://www.ontario.ca/page/open-government-licence-ontario

    Time period covered
    Sep 4, 2020
    Area covered
    Ontario
    Description

    The numbers reflect incidents that were reported to and tracked by the Ministry of Labour. They exclude death from natural causes, death of non- workers at a workplace, suicides, death as a result of a criminal act or traffic accident (unless the OHSA is also implicated) and death from occupational exposures that occurred in the past.

    Data from the Ministry of Labour reflects Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) and Employment Standards (ES) information at a point in time and/or for specific reporting purposes. As a result, the information above may not align with other data sources.

    Notes on critical injuries :

    For the purposes of the data provided, a critical injury of a serious nature includes injuries that:

    1. "Place life in jeopardy"
    2. "Produce unconsciousness"
    3. "Result in substantial loss of blood"
    4. "Involve the fracture of a leg or arm but not a finger or toe"
    5. "Involve the amputation of a leg, arm, hand or foot but not a finger or toe"
    6. "Consist of burns to a major portion of the body"
    7. "Cause the loss of sight

    Only critical injury events reported to the ministry are included here. This represents data that was reported to the ministry and may not represent what actually occurred at the workplace. The critical injury numbers represent critical injuries reported to the ministry and not necessarily critical injuries as defined by the Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA). Non- workers who are critically injured may also be included in the ministry's data. Critical injuries data is presented by calendar year to be consistent with Workplace Safety and Insurance Board harmonized data;

    Data is reported based on calendar year

    Individual data for the Health Care program is available for Jan. 1 to Mar. 31, 2011 only. From April 2011 onwards Health Care data is included in the Industrial Health and Safety numbers.

    Notes on Fatalities :

    Only events reported to the ministry are included here. The ministry tracks and reports fatalities at workplaces covered by the OHSA. This excludes death from natural causes, death of non-workers at a workplace, suicides, death as a result of a criminal act or traffic accident (unless the OHSA is also implicated) and death from occupational exposures that occurred many years ago. Fatalities data is presented by calendar year to be consistent with Workplace Safety and Insurance Board harmonized data. Fatality data is reported by year of event.

    *[OHSA]: Occupational Health and Safety Act *[Mar.]: March *[Jan.]: January

    As of 2024, annual fatality data (including previous years) is reported by year of death.

  18. Death rate due to construction-related injuries, New Jersey, by year:...

    • healthdata.nj.gov
    • data.wu.ac.at
    csv, xlsx, xml
    Updated Sep 18, 2020
    + more versions
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    New Jersey Department of Health (2020). Death rate due to construction-related injuries, New Jersey, by year: Beginning 2010 [Dataset]. https://healthdata.nj.gov/dataset/Death-rate-due-to-construction-related-injuries-Ne/pqe8-s7x7
    Explore at:
    xlsx, csv, xmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Sep 18, 2020
    Dataset authored and provided by
    New Jersey Department of Healthhttps://www.nj.gov/health/
    Area covered
    New Jersey
    Description

    Fatal occupational injuries (unintentional and homicide), incidence rate (construction), New Jersey.

    Rate: fatalities per 100,000 construction workers.

    Definition: Number and incidence rate of fatal occupational injuries, when the injury occurred while the individual was working in a construction-related occupation, either on or off of the employer's premises.

    Data Source: Occupational Health Surveillance Unit, New Jersey Department of Health

  19. w

    Fire statistics data tables

    • gov.uk
    • s3.amazonaws.com
    Updated Oct 23, 2025
    + more versions
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    Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (2025). Fire statistics data tables [Dataset]. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/fire-statistics-data-tables
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Oct 23, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    GOV.UK
    Authors
    Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government
    Description

    On 1 April 2025 responsibility for fire and rescue transferred from the Home Office to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government.

    This information covers fires, false alarms and other incidents attended by fire crews, and the statistics include the numbers of incidents, fires, fatalities and casualties as well as information on response times to fires. The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) also collect information on the workforce, fire prevention work, health and safety and firefighter pensions. All data tables on fire statistics are below.

    MHCLG has responsibility for fire services in England. The vast majority of data tables produced by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government are for England but some (0101, 0103, 0201, 0501, 1401) tables are for Great Britain split by nation. In the past the Department for Communities and Local Government (who previously had responsibility for fire services in England) produced data tables for Great Britain and at times the UK. Similar information for devolved administrations are available at https://www.firescotland.gov.uk/about/statistics/">Scotland: Fire and Rescue Statistics, https://statswales.gov.wales/Catalogue/Community-Safety-and-Social-Inclusion/Community-Safety">Wales: Community safety and https://www.nifrs.org/home/about-us/publications/">Northern Ireland: Fire and Rescue Statistics.

    If you use assistive technology (for example, a screen reader) and need a version of any of these documents in a more accessible format, please email alternativeformats@communities.gov.uk. Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

    Related content

    Fire statistics guidance
    Fire statistics incident level datasets

    Incidents attended

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/68f0f810e8e4040c38a3cf96/FIRE0101.xlsx">FIRE0101: Incidents attended by fire and rescue services by nation and population (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 143 KB) Previous FIRE0101 tables

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/68f0ffd528f6872f1663ef77/FIRE0102.xlsx">FIRE0102: Incidents attended by fire and rescue services in England, by incident type and fire and rescue authority (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 2.12 MB) Previous FIRE0102 tables

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/68f20a3e06e6515f7914c71c/FIRE0103.xlsx">FIRE0103: Fires attended by fire and rescue services by nation and population (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 197 KB) Previous FIRE0103 tables

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/68f20a552f0fc56403a3cfef/FIRE0104.xlsx">FIRE0104: Fire false alarms by reason for false alarm, England (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 443 KB) Previous FIRE0104 tables

    Dwelling fires attended

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/68f100492f0fc56403a3cf94/FIRE0201.xlsx">FIRE0201: Dwelling fires attended by fire and rescue services by motive, population and nation (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 192 KB) Previous FIRE0201 tables

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  20. Fatalities in the Israeli-Palestinian

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Oct 10, 2023
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    willian oliveira (2023). Fatalities in the Israeli-Palestinian [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/willianoliveiragibin/fatalities-in-the-israeli-palestinian
    Explore at:
    zip(474146 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Oct 10, 2023
    Authors
    willian oliveira
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Area covered
    Israel, Palestine
    Description

    Some Task Ideas:

    Analyze Fatality Trends: Explore the dataset and track the trends in fatalities over time. Identify any significant changes, spikes, or declines in the number of fatalities. Demographic Analysis:Conduct a demographic analysis by examining the age, gender, and citizenship of the individuals killed. Determine if there are any notable patterns or disparities in the data. Geospatial Analysis: Utilize the event location, district, and region information to perform geospatial analysis. Visualize the distribution of fatalities on a map and identify areas that have experienced higher levels of violence. Hostilities Participation Analysis:Investigate the extent of individuals' participation in hostilities before their deaths. Analyze the relationship between participation and the circumstances surrounding each fatality. Injury Analysis: Examine the types of injuries inflicted on individuals. Identify the most common types of injuries and assess their severity. Weapons Used: Analyze the ammunition and means by which the individuals were killed. Determine the most frequently used weapons or methods and evaluate their impact. Victim Profiles: Create profiles of the victims based on the available data such as age, gender, citizenship, and place of residence. Identify common characteristics among the victims.

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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (2025). NCHS - Injury Mortality: United States [Dataset]. https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/nchs-injury-mortality-united-states
Organization logo

NCHS - Injury Mortality: United States

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Apr 23, 2025
Dataset provided by
Centers for Disease Control and Preventionhttp://www.cdc.gov/
Area covered
United States
Description

This dataset describes injury mortality in the United States beginning in 1999. Two concepts are included in the circumstances of an injury death: intent of injury and mechanism of injury. Intent of injury describes whether the injury was inflicted purposefully (intentional injury) and, if purposeful, whether the injury was self-inflicted (suicide or self-harm) or inflicted by another person (homicide). Injuries that were not purposefully inflicted are considered unintentional (accidental) injuries. Mechanism of injury describes the source of the energy transfer that resulted in physical or physiological harm to the body. Examples of mechanisms of injury include falls, motor vehicle traffic crashes, burns, poisonings, and drownings (1,2). Data are based on information from all resident death certificates filed in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. Age-adjusted death rates (per 100,000 standard population) are based on the 2000 U.S. standard population. Populations used for computing death rates for 2011–2015 are postcensal estimates based on the 2010 census, estimated as of July 1, 2010. Rates for census years are based on populations enumerated in the corresponding censuses. Rates for non-census years before 2010 are revised using updated intercensal population estimates and may differ from rates previously published. Causes of injury death are classified by the International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD–10). Categories of injury intent and injury mechanism generally follow the categories in the external-cause-of-injury mortality matrix (1,2). Cause-of-death statistics are based on the underlying cause of death. SOURCES CDC/NCHS, National Vital Statistics System, mortality data (see http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/deaths.htm); and CDC WONDER (see http://wonder.cdc.gov). REFERENCES National Center for Health Statistics. ICD–10: External cause of injury mortality matrix. National Center for Health Statistics. Vital statistics data available. Mortality multiple cause files. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. Available from: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data_access/vitalstatsonline.htm. Murphy SL, Xu JQ, Kochanek KD, Curtin SC, and Arias E. Deaths: Final data for 2015. National vital statistics reports; vol 66. no. 6. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2017. Available from: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr66/nvsr66_06.pdf. Miniño AM, Anderson RN, Fingerhut LA, Boudreault MA, Warner M. Deaths: Injuries, 2002. National vital statistics reports; vol 54 no 10. Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics. 2006.

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