Are YOU at risk of an avoidable death? Map reveals the postcode lottery of 'dying from a preventable cause'

  • Blackpool had the highest rate of preventable male mortality in 2017
  • Some 415.2 out of every 100,000 male deaths could have been avoided
  • Compared to just 248.7 avoidable male deaths per 100,000 in Surrey 
  • The ONS measured avoidable fatality rates across England and Wales via death registration data.
    It defined preventable fatalities as those 'where it is reasonable to expect deaths could be avoided through good-quality healthcare, even after the condition has developed.
    '[And] those where it is possible to prevent the condition from occurring in the first place through wider public health interventions, such as those targeted at reducing the incidence of smoking.' 
  • The data further revealed around 23 per cent of all deaths (141,313 out of 607,172) in the UK in 2017 were avoidable, of which 60 per cent were among men.
    With 224.7 in every 100,000 deaths being preventable in 2017, this was significantly less than the 228.7 the year before.
    Since 2014, the largest changes in avoidable mortality rates were for injuries, which rose by 37 per cent in Northern Ireland, and respiratory disease, like asthma, which increased by 19 per cent in Wales.
    Cancer remained the leading cause of avoidable death in 2017 and was responsible for up to 92.7 in every 100,000 fatalities in the UK.
    Scotland had the highest rate of preventable deaths for cancer, heart disease, drug use, injuries and infections. 
    But Wales had the most avoidable mortalities from respiratory diseases, which caused 30.1 in every 100,000 such deaths. 
    Among youngsters aged 0-to-19, 34 per cent of all deaths in 2017 were from avoidable causes. 
    This made up one per cent of the total preventable deaths in the UK that year.
    Most occurred due to injuries, followed by 'perinatal' deaths - those that take place during pregnancy or the first year of life, as well as birth defects that affect the circulatory system or spina bifida.  
    Although mortality rates among children and young people have fluctuated since 2014, there has been no significant improvement.