41-County Eastern North Carolina Compared to the Rest of the State, 2011 (revised 04/29/13)
In 2011, 20.4% of Eastern North Carolinians reported their health as “poor or fair” compared to 19.3% of citizens in the rest of the state.1
Age-adjusted death rates are substantially greater in Eastern North Carolina than the rest of the state for virtually all major causes of death.2
- Heart disease mortality is 12% greater
- Cancer (all sites) mortality is 3% greater
- Lung cancer mortality is 6% greater
- Colon cancer mortality is 2.8% greater
- Diabetes mortality is 30% greater
- Stroke mortality is 0.8% greater
- COPD mortality is 6.3% less
- Unintentional motor vehicle injuries mortality is 25% greater
- Other Unintentional injuries mortality is 3% greater
- Homicide is 29% greater
- Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis mortality is 15.5% greater
- Septicemia mortality is 7.5% greater
- Pneumonia and influenza mortality is 0.2% greater
- Suicide is 3% greater
In terms of premature mortality (i.e., years of life lost before age 75), the 2009 US data3 indicate North Carolina ranks 35th among the 50 states.
If the 41-county Eastern North Carolina region were a state, it would rank 45th; above Oklahoma, Arkansas, West Virginia, Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, and the District of Columbia. If the rest of North Carolina (59 counties) were considered alone, it would rank 29th, with a rate most similar to Michigan’s.
The rates and ranks for 2009 are as follows:
Region | Rate | Rank |
---|---|---|
Minnesota | 506.4 | 1st |
The rest of NC (59 counties) | 706.1 | 29th |
NC | 757.8 | 35th |
ENC (29 counties) | 890.9 | 45th |
ENC (41 counties) | 891.5 | 45th |
Mississippi | 1028.8 | 51st |
District of Columbia | 943.2 | 47th |
United States | 681.8 |
1 North Carolina Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey, 2011. 95% CIs for Eastern NC and Rest of NC are 18.3 – 22.7 and 18.0 – 20.6, respectively.
2 Mortality rates per 100,000 for the year 2010 and age-adjusted to the US 2000 standard million (from NC SCHS’s Vital Statistics accessed via UNC—Chapel Hill’s Odum Institute).
3 Premature mortality (before age 75) rates per 10,000 for the year 2009 and age-adjusted to the US 2000 standard million (from NCHS’s Compressed Mortality Files 1999-2009).