Infant Death Risk from Circulatory System Diseases (2024)
10.4 per 100,000 live births (about 1 in 9,615)
Conditional probability in US
In 2024, NCHS reported an infant mortality rate from diseases of the circulatory system of 10.4 per 100,000 live births (about 1 in 9,615).
The National Center for Health Statistics reported 376 infant deaths from diseases of the circulatory system in 2024, making it the number 9 leading cause of infant death in the United States. The NCHS figure table gives an infant mortality rate of 10.4 per 100,000 live births (about 1 in 9,615), and this cause accounted for 1.9% of all U.S. infant deaths that year.
This statistic is conditional on a live birth. It is not a rate for the whole population, and it is not the same thing as the probability that a pregnancy will have a poor outcome. Infant mortality rates are calculated as deaths under age 1 divided by live births in the same year, then expressed per 100,000 live births. That framing makes the number useful for comparing causes within the first year of life.
For decision-making, the main use is preparation rather than alarm. The national benchmark can help families, clinicians, and planners identify where prevention or readiness matters most: prenatal anomaly screening, pediatric cardiology referral for known heart issues, delivery planning, and close monitoring after birth. Some risks can be reduced before birth, some depend on delivery setting and neonatal care, and some are detected only after birth.
Personal risk can differ greatly from the national rate. Prematurity, birth weight, congenital conditions, maternal health, prenatal care access, sleep environment, geography, and hospital capability can all change the picture. The value of the NCHS number is that it gives a grounded baseline before adding those individual factors. The cause category is coded with ICD-10 (I00-I99), so it should be used as a population-level reference rather than a clinical prediction for one infant.
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