57 people die in South Carolina from cerebrovascular disease in week ending July 24

57 people die in South Carolina from cerebrovascular disease in week ending July 24
0Comments

There were 57 deaths with cerebrovascular disease listed as the underlying cause reported in South Carolina during the week ending July 24, a 1.7 percent decrease from the previous week, according to The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In the week ending July 24, there were 1,058 deaths in the state. 19.3 percent of deaths were caused by heart disease, 19.3 percent were from cancer and 5.5 percent were from COVID-19. Additionally, 8.1 percent of deaths were from Alzheimer’s disease and dementia.

Studies show doctors and medical examiners may underreport Alzheimer’s disease and dementia-related conditions as the underlying cause of death on death certificates, according to the National Institute on Aging.

Once infected, older adults with dementia are likely to develop a more severe and dangerous illness. The diseases which make an older adult more vulnerable to COVID-19 are age-associated chronic conditions, according to the Bright Focus Foundation.

South Carolina top 10 causes of death in week ending July 24

Cause of Death Number of Deaths 2021-07-24 Number of Deaths 2021-07-17
Malignant neoplasms (cancerous tumor) 204 217
Heart disease 204 202
Cerebrovascular diseases 57 58
Chronic lower respiratory diseases 50 58
Alzheimer’s disease 43 31
COVID-19 (multiple cause) 30 20
COVID-19 (underlying cause) 28 15
Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome and nephrosis 24 32
Diabetes mellitus 16 20
Influenza and pneumonia 14 13

South Carolina Dementia deaths in week ending July 24
Cause of Death Number of Deaths 2021-07-24 Number of Deaths 2021-07-17
Alzheimer disease and dementia 86 83


Related

Alan Wilson, Attorney General of South Carolina

Midlands men arrested on charges related to child sexual abuse material

South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson has announced the arrests of two Midlands men, Donald Cyril Barkhoff, 52, of Columbia, and Ethan Rylee Roberts, 18, of Lexington.

Lt. Governor Pamela S. Evette

South Carolina recorded $222.8 million in alcohol sales taxes collections in 2024

Of the $18 billion in taxes collected by South Carolina in 2024, 1.2%, or $222.8 million, came from alcoholic beverages sales taxes, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s Annual Survey of State Government Tax Collections (STC).

Henry McMaster, Governor of South Carolina

Governor McMaster to speak at Liberty Day event at Statehouse

Governor Henry McMaster is scheduled to speak at Liberty Day on Friday, January 16, 2026.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Palmetto State News.