1998 — Influenza, ICD-9 code 487.0; US death rate 0.62 per 100K; esp. MT (6.72) –1,724
–1,724 CDC Wonder. Compressed Mortality File 1979-1998. ICD-9 code[1] 487.0[2] influenza).
Alabama 15 0.34
Arizona 12 0.25
Arkansas 29 1.10 (Yellow highlight denotes higher than average death rate.)
California 213 0.65
Colorado 21 0.51
Connecticut 23 0.68
Florida 20 0.13
Georgia 12 0.15
Hawaii 10 0.82
Idaho 19 1.52
Illinois 63 0.51
Indiana 25 0.42
Iowa 78 2.69
Kansas 11 0.41
Kentucky 11 0.28
Louisiana 17 0.38
Maine 48 3.81
Maryland 17 0.33
Massachusetts 37 0.59
Michigan 110 1.12
Minnesota 99 2.06 Pennsylvania 54 0.44
Missouri 78 1.41 South Dakota 25 3.35
Montana 60 6.72 Tennessee 45 0.81
Nebraska 16 0.94 Texas 31 0.15
New Hampshire 23 1.91 Vermont 11 1.83
New Mexico 13 0.72 Virginia 20 0.29
New York 128 0.68 Washington 23 0.40
North Carolina 27 0.35 West Virginia 23 1.27
Ohio 76 0.67 Wisconsin 103 1.94
Oklahoma 13 0.38 Wyoming 11 2.24
Blanchard note: States and DC not shown indicate that the “total” function was “disabled” because there were fewer than 10 deaths. Puerto Rico is not included in CDC Wonder.
Source:
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. Compressed Mortality File 1999-2016 on CDC Wonder Online Database, released June 2017. ICD-10 codes J09-J11.8, Influenza, 2000. Accessed 11-2-2018 at: https://wonder.cdc.gov
[1] ICD-9 is the 9th revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, a medical classification list by the World Health Organization.
[2] 487.0 (influenza with pneumonia), 487.1 (with other respiratory manifestations), 487.8 (with other manifestations).