Cause of Death Then and Now: It’s All Relative
The leading causes of Death in London in 1665, when statistical data was just beginning to be collected, were documented on what was called “Bills of Mortality”.
The tabulation on the leading causes of death was collected at the height of the Black Plaque. Compare it to the leading causes of death today in 2013.
Are we so different in disease or symptoms in the last 348 years? Or have we just mixed and matched symptoms and given new labels to the names of the diseases that choose us? Could it be that the difference is just how they looked at death as an end 348 years ago? What do you think?
Year 1665 Leading Causes of Death Year 2013 Leading Causes of Death
Abortion Heart Disease
Aged Cancer
Ague Stroke
Apoplexie Chronic Lower Respiratory Disease
Bleeding Accidents
Burnt in His Bed by a Candle Diabetes
Canker Influenza & Pneumonia
Childbed Alzheimer’s Disease
Chrisomes Nephritis
Consumption Septicemia
Convulsion Suicide
Cough Chronic Liver Disease
Dropsie Primary Hypertension
Fever Parkinson’s Disease
Flox and Small Pox Homicide
Frightened Road Injury
Gowt Prematurity
Grief HIV/Aids
Griping in the Guts Diarrhea
Iaundies Trachea, Bronchus & Lung Cancers
Imposthume Chronic Liver Disease
Infants Tuberculosis
Killed By a Fall Malaria
Kingsevil Measles
Lethargy Syphilis
Palsie Epilepsy
Plague Hepatitis
Rickets Meningitis
Rising of the Lights Pertussis
Scowring Asthma
Scurvy Fire
Spleen Poisoning
Spotted Feaver Drowning
Stillborn Congenital Heart Defect
Stone Dementia
Stopping of the Stomach Cirrhosis
Strangury Stomach Cancer
Suddenly Sepsis/Blood Poisoning
Surgeit Alcoholism
Teeth
Thresh
Tiffick
Timpany
Vomiting
Winde
Wormes
Creative Commons License photo credit: amiefedora