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Homicide in Latin America & Caribbean

Country-level homicide mortality data for Latin America & Caribbean. Age-standardized death rates per 100,000 population from the IHME Global Burden of Disease Study.

Homicide worldwide Latin America & Caribbean overview
Homicide — Latin America & Caribbean
Death rate per 100,000 by country (latest year)
Country Data
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About Homicide in Latin America & Caribbean

This page presents homicide mortality data for countries in Latin America & Caribbean, using age-standardized death rates per 100,000 population from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME). Regional analysis reveals significant variation in disease burden between countries, reflecting differences in healthcare infrastructure, socioeconomic conditions, environmental risk factors, and public health policy implementation across Latin America & Caribbean.

Understanding Homicide in Latin America & Caribbean
Overview — Latin America & Caribbean

Homicide — the intentional killing of one person by another — claims approximately 460,000 lives globally each year, with young men aged 15-29 disproportionately represented as both victims and perpetrators. The Americas bear the highest regional burden, with Latin America and the Caribbean experiencing homicide rates four to five times the global average, driven by organised crime, drug trafficking, gang violence, and widespread firearm availability. Central America's Northern Triangle (Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala) and parts of Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Venezuela, and South Africa consistently rank among the world's most lethal settings. The mechanisms of homicidal violence vary geographically: firearms dominate in the Americas, sharp objects and blunt force are more common in Africa and Europe, while intimate partner violence disproportionately affects women across all regions. Structural risk factors include income inequality, unemployment, rapid urbanisation, weak rule of law, corruption, political instability, and cultural norms that normalise violence. Alcohol and substance use are proximate risk factors, present in a substantial proportion of homicide events worldwide. Latin America and the Caribbean have made substantial gains in life expectancy over recent decades, but face growing non-communicable disease burdens, persistent health inequalities, and pockets of high violence-related mortality. In Latin America & Caribbean, homicide mortality is broadly consistent with global patterns, though wide disparities exist between upper-middle-income countries and lower-income Caribbean and Central American nations.

Prevention and Intervention — Homicide
Evidence-based approaches

Violence prevention operates across ecological levels. At the societal level, reducing income inequality, enforcing firearm regulations, and addressing impunity through justice system reform are foundational. Community-level interventions include focused deterrence strategies (such as Operation Ceasefire), hospital-based violence intervention programmes that intercept victims at the point of injury, and urban upgrading of informal settlements. Individual-level approaches encompass cognitive behavioural therapy for high-risk youth, substance abuse treatment, and parenting programmes that reduce exposure to adverse childhood experiences.

Methodology & Data Sources
How to interpret these mortality statistics

The mortality estimates presented on this page are derived from the Global Burden of Disease (GBD) study, produced by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME). The GBD synthesizes data from vital registration systems, verbal autopsies, cancer registries, and surveillance networks across more than 200 countries and territories. Death rates are expressed per 100,000 population and are age-standardized, which adjusts for differences in age structure between populations so that comparisons across countries and over time reflect genuine differences in mortality risk rather than demographic composition.

The dataset typically covers the period from 1990 to 2023, although availability varies by country and cause. When interpreting the figures for homicide in Latin America & Caribbean, note that higher age-standardized rates indicate a greater mortality burden independent of whether a country's population is older or younger. Trends over time reveal whether public health interventions, economic development, and health system improvements have reduced or increased the toll of this condition in the region.

Analytical Guidance — Homicide
Understanding disease-specific mortality

Disease-specific death rates measure the number of deaths directly attributed to homicide per 100,000 people, after accounting for age structure. These rates capture both the prevalence of the condition and the likelihood of a fatal outcome once affected. In Latin America & Caribbean, variation across countries may reflect differences in disease prevalence, access to treatment, diagnostic capacity, and the presence of comorbidities. Examining trends alongside health expenditure and intervention coverage helps identify where policy action has been most effective.