1993 — Exposure to excessive natural cold/hypothermia (ICD-9 E901 code); esp. MI/42–641

–641 CDC Wonder. (Average hypothermia death rate was 0.25 per 100,000 population.)

Death rate for hypothermia per 100,000 population, where noted.

Alabama 22 0.52
Alaska 15 2.50 Highest loss of life per 100,000 population of any State.
Arizona 20 0.49
California 17 0.05
Colorado 14 0.39
Georgia 21 0.30
Illinois 28 0.24
Indiana 14 0.24
Kansas 11 0.43
Kentucky 13 0.34
Massachusetts 17 0.28
Michigan 42 0.44 Highest loss of life of any State.
Minnesota 16 0.35
Mississippi 10 0.38
Missouri 14 0.27
New Jersey 19 0.24
New Mexico 21 1.28
New York 28 0.15
North Carolina 18 0.26
North Dakota 10 1.56
Ohio 24 0.22
Oklahoma 12 0.37
Oregon 11 0.36
Pennsylvania 28 0.23
South Carolina 11 0.30
South Dakota 13 1.80
Tennessee 16 0.31
Texas 16 0.09
Virginia 26 0.40
Washington 11 0.21
Wisconsin 10 0.20

Source

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. Compressed Mortality File 1979-1998. CDC WONDER On-line Database, compiled from Compressed Mortality File CMF 1968-1988, Series 20, No. 2A, 2000 and CMF 1989-1998, Series 20, No. 2E, 2003. Accessed at http://wonder.cdc.gov/cmf-icd9.html on Sep 1, 2021 12:32:32 PM