The most widely cited figure is from a report issues by the Institute of Medicine entitled "To Err is Human". They estimated that 90,000 hospitalized people per year in the US die due to medical mistakes. This report has been widely criticized because they counted any death after any error as being from that error no matter how long after or implausible the connection. Other studies and other analyses of the same data set have come up with numbers of roughly half that much.
Zero. There are no records of death resulting from marijuana smoking.
A Harvard Medical Study Links Lack of Insurance to 45,000 U.S. Deaths a Year
Of course. People die from approved medication, so they most definitely die from experimental medication.
In America, people want to die at home with loved ones, but instead they often die in medical facilities with strangers.
There are so many ways, it's hard to add up all the numbers. For instance, how many people die in jail due to inadequate medical care? How many people die because life-saving drugs are not approved? How many people die as a result of poverty-related circumstances because governments suppress economic freedom?
How many people die each year from hiccups
From a legal or medical perspective people die "instantaneously" (that is, in an infinitesimally small amount of time)
Around 1,000 people in the United States die each year due to a ruptured appendix. It is important to seek medical attention promptly if you are experiencing symptoms of appendicitis to prevent complications.
Most people die in the rural areas because there are limited resources that they need like medical facilities.
Anyone can die from it but people with outstanding medical problems and the elderly have higher risk of death
Just a guess but I think subconciously, we know people die there, we know the risks of malpractice. It just makes us uncomfortable. I get that way too. Your not alone.