2002 — Influenza, ICD-10 codes J09-11; US death rate 0.253 per 100K; esp. SD (2.237) — 727
–727 CDC Wonder. Compressed Mortality File 1999-2016. ICD-10 code[1] J09-11[2] influenza).
Arizona 13 0.241
California 25 0.072
Colorado 19 0.423 (Yellow highlight denotes higher than average death rate.)
Connecticut 10 0.289
Florida 10 0.060
Illinois 35 0.279
Indiana 15 0.244
Iowa 25 0.852
Kentucky 13 0.318
Maryland 14 0.257
Michigan 26 0.260
Minnesota 56 1.116
Missouri 31 0.546
Nebraska 12 0.694
New York 56 0.293
North Carolina 15 0.180
Ohio 25 0.219
Oregon 10 0.285
Pennsylvania 23 0.187
South Dakota 17 2.237
Tennessee 17 0.293
Texas 36 0.166
Vermont 12 1.950
Virginia 19 0.261
Washington 25 0.413
Wisconsin 43 0.790
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, 2003. Accessed 10-25-2018 at: https://wonder.cdc.gov
[1] ICD-10 is the 10th revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, a medical classification list by the World Health Organization.
[2] J09 (Influenza due to identified avian influenza virus), J10.0 (Influenza with pneumonia, influenza virus identified, J10.1 (Influenza with other respiratory manifestations, influenza virus identified), J10.8 (Influenza with other manifestations, influenza virus identified), J11.0 (Influenza with pneumonia, virus not identified), J11.1 (Influenza with other respiratory manifestations, virus not identified, J11.8.