What Really Kills People?

The Top 5 Natural Causes, Counted Down

Ask a roomful of first-year students what kills people, and you'll hear plane crashes, shark attacks, and serial killers before anyone says "high blood pressure." The actual leading causes are quieter than that, and they kill on a scale the dramatic ones never approach. In 2024, about three million Americans died, and the top ten causes accounted for roughly seven in ten of those deaths.

A quiet hospital corridor at night with a single nurse at a station, warm light, conveying the everyday nature of mortality
The leading causes of death are rarely dramatic. Most arrive slowly. "Inauguración del Hospital Municipal de Chiconcuac" by Presidencia de la República Mexicana is licensed under CC BY 2.0. To view a copy of this license, visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/.

A word on scope before the countdown, because scope changes the answer entirely. These rankings are for the United States, all ages, using the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics. In 2024, 3,072,039 deaths occurred in the United States, and the overall age-adjusted death rate was 3.8% lower than in 2023. I'm counting natural causes, so unintentional injuries (third overall) sit outside this list even though they kill more people than stroke. Shift the frame to a low-income country and the picture rearranges: infectious disease and childbirth climb, and stroke outranks heart disease in places like South Asia. Shift to young adults anywhere and overdose, suicide, and trauma dominate. Hold the frame steady, US, all ages, and here are the five, from fifth-most to most frequent.

Part 1: The countdown, fifth to first

The numbers below are CDC provisional 2024 totals. They are stable enough to rank confidently, though final counts may shift slightly.

Horizontal bar chart of the five leading natural causes of death in the US, 2024 provisional
US provisional deaths, 2024 (CDC/NCHS). Unintentional injury, third overall, is excluded as a non-natural cause. Chart — data: CDC/NCHS FastStats — Leading Causes of Death (sourced from Mortality in the United States, 2024, data table for figure 4) — https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/leading-causes-of-death.htm; CDC/NCHS Data Brief No. 548 — Mortality in the United States, 2024 (Xu et al., January 2026) — https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db548.htm; CDC/NCHS VSRR Report No. 39 — Mortality in the United States: Provisional Data, 2024 (Ahmad et al., September 2025) — https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/vsrr/vsrr039.pdf

Number five: Alzheimer's disease. Alzheimer's accounted for 116,022 deaths. It earns its place partly through demographics: we keep more people alive long enough to develop it. There's no cure, but the prevention story is more hopeful than most clinicians assume, which I'll come back to.

Number four: chronic lower respiratory diseases, mostly COPD. These caused 145,643 deaths. This is the long shadow of cigarettes, decades after the first puff.

Number three: stroke. Cerebrovascular disease killed 166,852 people. A stroke is plumbing failure in the brain, either a clot or a bleed, and it shares almost its entire risk-factor profile with the disease sitting at number one.

Number two: cancer. Cancer accounted for 619,876 deaths, not one disease but hundreds, which is why no single prevention lever works across all of them.

Number one: heart disease, and it isn't close. Heart disease caused 683,491 deaths. It has been the leading cause of death in the United States since 1950. Globally the dominance is even starker: cardiovascular diseases were responsible for 19.2 million deaths in 2023, up from 13.1 million in 1990.

Part 2: What actually prevents each one

A ranking of killers is just trivia unless you pair it with what moves the needle. For each, here's the single most effective lever, with the evidence behind it and an honest note on its strength.

Diagram showing shared modifiable risk factors feeding into heart disease, stroke, and dementia
The big killers share an upstream plumbing problem. Hit the shared risks and you move several outcomes at once. Diagram generated by OAS

Heart disease and stroke, treated together. They share an engine, so they share a brake. Risk factors for heart disease include high blood pressure, high cholesterol, smoking, diabetes, overweight and obesity, unhealthy diet, physical inactivity, and excessive alcohol use. Of these, blood pressure does the most damage at the population level. In 2023, high systolic blood pressure was the leading contributor to cardiovascular disease burden worldwide, followed by non-optimal diet. This is well-established, causal evidence from randomized trials, not just association. The practical takeaway is unglamorous: find and treat hypertension, because it's common, silent, and cheap to manage.

  • Measure blood pressure at every reasonable opportunity, since most hypertension is asymptomatic.
  • Treat it to target with generic, well-tolerated drugs.
  • Stack the other levers where you can: smoking cessation, LDL lowering, glucose control.

Cancer. No single lever covers every tumor, but one factor towers over the rest. An estimated 40.0% of all incident cancers in US adults aged 30 and older in 2019 were attributable to potentially modifiable risk factors. By the American Cancer Society's analysis, 44% of all cancer deaths in that group were attributable to modifiable risk factors. The biggest single one is not subtle. Cigarette smoking had the largest population attributable fraction, accounting for 19.3% of all cases. Smoking contributed to nearly 20% of all cancer cases and 30% of all cancer deaths. For cancer, "prevention" mostly means tobacco control, plus the targeted wins of HPV vaccination and screening that catches disease early.

COPD. Same villain, different organ. The dominant cause of chronic lower respiratory disease is tobacco smoke, and the single most effective intervention is stopping the exposure: quitting smoking, and policy that drives quit rates up. Lung damage doesn't reverse, but the decline slows sharply once the smoke stops.

Alzheimer's and dementia. Here's the part that surprises clinicians who assume dementia is pure genetic fate. The 2024 Lancet Commission concluded that addressing 14 modifiable risk factors, starting in childhood and continuing through life, could prevent or delay nearly half of dementia cases. The update added two new factors: about 7% of cases attributable to high LDL cholesterol in midlife from around age 40, and 2% to untreated vision loss in later life. Several of those overlap with the cardiovascular list, which is why blood pressure, cholesterol, and exercise keep reappearing.

Two honest qualifications. First, that 45% is a population-level, theoretical maximum, not a personal guarantee. The risk modification affects the population and does not guarantee that any individual will avoid dementia. Second, much of the dementia evidence is observational. We can't randomize people to decades of high blood pressure, so causation is inferred, carefully, from converging studies rather than proven the way a drug trial proves a drug.

Part 3: The pattern worth carrying into clinic

Line the five up and the redundancy jumps out. Heart disease, stroke, much of cancer, COPD, and a large slice of dementia all respond to a short, overlapping list: don't smoke, control blood pressure, manage cholesterol and glucose, move your body, drink little. In 2023, 79.6% of all cardiovascular disease disability-adjusted life years globally were attributable to modifiable risk factors.

So the patient in front of you with untreated hypertension isn't just a cardiology problem. That same number is quietly feeding their stroke risk and their dementia risk at once. The unglamorous work, the blood pressure cuff, the cessation conversation, the statin nobody remembers to start, does more against the real top five than any single dramatic intervention you'll learn to perform.

This article is general education, not personalized medical advice. Individual decisions belong with a qualified clinician who knows the patient.

If you're early in training and want to build the bedside skills that make this prevention work real, from taking an accurate blood pressure to running a focused history, The Apprentice Doctor's courses and kits are built for exactly that stage.

Heart disease is the number one killer!

Are you plan on pursuing one of the following careers?

Physicians (non-surgical)

  • Cardiologist: diagnoses and manages heart and blood-vessel disease medically. The core specialty, with subspecialties:
    • Interventional cardiologist: catheter procedures like angioplasty and stents
    • Electrophysiologist: rhythm disorders, ablations, pacemakers/defibrillators
    • Heart failure / transplant cardiologist: advanced failure, LVADs, transplant management
    • Cardiac imaging specialist: echocardiography, cardiac MRI/CT, nuclear
    • Preventive cardiologist: lipids and risk reduction
    • Pediatric cardiologist: congenital and childhood heart disease

Surgeons

  • Cardiothoracic (cardiac) surgeon: bypass, valve repair/replacement, transplants
  • Vascular surgeon: arteries and veins outside the heart, including aneurysms and peripheral artery disease
  • Cardiac anesthesiologist: anesthesia for cardiac and thoracic surgery

Nursing & advanced practice

  • Cardiac nurse: ward, telemetry, and CCU/CVICU care
  • Cardiology nurse practitioner / physician associate: diagnosis and management alongside a cardiologist

Allied health / technical

  • Cardiac sonographer (echocardiographer): ultrasound imaging of the heart
  • Cardiovascular technologist: cath-lab and procedural support
  • Perfusionist: runs the heart-lung machine during open-heart surgery
  • EKG/ECG technician: performs and monitors electrocardiograms
  • Cardiac rehabilitation specialist / clinical exercise physiologist: supervised recovery and conditioning

The following resources are ideal for you:

Courses

Kits

Sources

  1. CDC/NCHS, FastStats: Leading Causes of Death (provisional 2024 figures). https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fastats/leading-causes-of-death.htm
  2. CDC/NCHS, Vital Statistics Rapid Release No. 39, Mortality in the United States, Provisional Data 2024 (Sept 2025). https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/vsrr/vsrr039.pdf
  3. CDC/NCHS Data Brief No. 521, Mortality in the United States, 2023. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db521.htm
  4. CDC MMWR, Mortality in the United States, Provisional Data, 2023. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/73/wr/mm7331a1.htm
  5. CDC/NCHS, Heart disease deaths, Health, United States. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/hus/topics/heart-disease-deaths.htm
  6. Global Burden of Disease 2023 cardiovascular report (ACC/IHME), JACC, Sept 2025. https://www.healthdata.org/news-events/newsroom/news-releases/report-cardiovascular-diseases-caused-1-3-global-deaths-2023
  7. Islami F, et al. "Proportion and number of cancer cases and deaths attributable to potentially modifiable risk factors in the United States, 2019." CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2024. https://acsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.3322/caac.21858
  8. American Cancer Society press release on the above study (44% of cancer deaths). https://pressroom.cancer.org/releases?item=1341
  9. Livingston G, et al. Dementia prevention, intervention, and care: 2024 report of the Lancet Commission. https://www.thelancet.com/commissions-do/dementia-prevention-intervention-and-care
  10. EurekAlert summary of the 2024 Lancet Commission on dementia. https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1052982