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Accidental Deaths & Natural Hazards

Basics

  • Why in News: NCRB 2023 report highlights deaths from natural causes (lightning, heat stroke, floods), showing rising vulnerability due to climate change.
  • Source: NCRB’s 2023 report on Accidental Deaths and Suicides in India.
  • Deaths due to forces of nature6,444.
  • Major natural causes:
    • Lightning strikes → 2,560 deaths (39.7%).
    • Heat stroke → 804 deaths (12.5%).
    • Floods, cold exposure, landslides, torrential rains → remaining share.

Relevance

  • GS1 (Geography) → Natural disasters, climate patterns (lightning, floods, heatwaves).
  • GS2 (Governance, Welfare) → Public health preparedness, NDMA role, inter-state coordination.
  • GS3 (Disaster Management, Environment) → Impact of climate change on mortality.

Other Key Fatalities (2023)

  • Snake bites10,144 deaths (major killer among natural/animal causes).
  • Animal attacks1,739 deaths (1,172 due to animal attacks, 567 due to snakebite misclassification within this category).
  • Insect/other bites: Also included in natural causes fatalities.

Regional Distribution

  • States with highest deaths due to forces of nature:
    • Madhya Pradesh – 397 deaths.
    • Bihar – 345.
    • Odisha – 294.
    • Uttar Pradesh – 287.
    • Jharkhand – 194.
  • Specific observations:
    • Odisha → 1,351 deaths from lightning alone (highest for one state).
    • Telangana → 82% of natural deaths due to heat stroke.
    • Himachal, Mizoram, Arunachal, Meghalaya → highest proportion of landslide-related deaths.

Demographic Insights

  • Age group most affected:
    • 30–45 years → 34.8%.
    • 45–60 years → 28.8%.
  • Cause-specific:
    • Lightning victims → 63.6% of total natural deaths.
    • Heat stroke → highest concentration in Telangana.

Urban–Rural Patterns

  • Urban centres:
    • Amritsar → highest overall exposure-related deaths (211 total; 196 due to heat).
    • Other high-burden cities → Ludhiana (50), Dhanbad (11).
  • Rural areas: disproportionately affected due to dependence on agriculture and outdoor work.

Comparisons & Trends

  • Snake bites (10,144) kill far more than all “forces of nature” combined (6,444).
  • Lightning deaths remain the single largest killer in the “natural forces” category.
  • Heatwave deaths are rising with climate change, especially in central and southern India.
  • NCRB notes under-reporting in states with weaker health and disaster surveillance.

Policy & Governance Implications

  • Disaster Preparedness:
    • Strengthen heatwave action plans (early warnings, public cooling shelters).
    • Lightning protection measures (lightning arresters, awareness campaigns for farmers and outdoor workers).
    • Snakebite management → stock antidotes, rural health infrastructure.
  • Urban planning: Heat island mitigation (green cover, water bodies).
  • Rural safety: Training for farmers, construction workers, outdoor labour.

October 2025
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