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Year Snapshot

Global Mortality in 1993

A snapshot of death rates, leading causes, and country rankings for 1993.

Countries with Data
#1 Cause of Death
Highest Death Rate
Lowest Death Rate
Year-over-Year Change
World Population
Cause of Death Shares — 1993
World average share of deaths by cause
Top Causes of Death — 1993
Global deaths by cause (absolute numbers)
Country Death Rates — 1993
Total death rate per 100,000 (top 30 countries)
#CountryDeath Rate#1 CauseRegion
Global Health in 1993
Historical context and key events

The World Bank's 1993 World Development Report 'Investing in Health' fundamentally reframed health as an investment rather than a cost, introducing the disability-adjusted life year (DALY) as a metric for prioritising interventions. The WHO declared tuberculosis a global emergency as multi-drug-resistant strains emerged. The Rwandan crisis was building toward the genocide that would erupt the following year.

Mortality Profile — 1993
Average share of deaths across 210 countries

In 1993, data from 210 countries reveals the leading causes of death by share: cardiovascular diseases (29.3%), cancers (neoplasms) (13.0%), lower respiratory infections (6.4%), neonatal disorders (5.4%), enteric infections (4.8%). These averages reflect the cross-country mean share of total deaths and highlight the dominant mortality patterns of the era.

How Mortality Changed Since 1990
Decade-level comparison of cause-of-death shares

Compared to 1990, the most significant shifts in the global mortality profile by 1993 include: HIV/AIDS increased by 0.9 percentage points (from 1.1% to 2.0%); enteric infections decreased by 0.5 percentage points (from 5.3% to 4.8%); diarrheal diseases decreased by 0.5 percentage points (from 4.9% to 4.4%); neonatal disorders decreased by 0.4 percentage points (from 5.8% to 5.4%). These changes reflect evolving risk factor exposures, demographic transitions, medical advances, and public health interventions across the world.

Understanding the Data
Methodology and interpretation

Global mortality statistics are compiled from multiple sources. High-income countries typically rely on national vital registration systems with medical certification of cause of death, while many low- and middle-income countries supplement incomplete civil registration with verbal autopsy surveys and hospital records. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) integrates these inputs using statistical modeling to produce comparable estimates across countries and years. The 'share of deaths' metric shown in the charts represents the proportion of all deaths in a given country-year attributed to each cause category, summing to approximately 100% across all causes. When comparing across years, small shifts of one to two percentage points may reflect updates in data sources, changes in diagnostic coding (such as ICD revision transitions), or improvements in modeling methodology rather than true epidemiological changes. Larger shifts — particularly those sustained over multiple consecutive years — are more likely to represent genuine trends in population health.