Skip to content
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
  • Your Preferences
    • Editorials
    • Gastronomy
    • Health & Medicine
    • Interviews
    • Community
    • News Updates
    • Opinion
    • Podcasts & Videos
    • Politics
    • Show Biz
    • Sport
  • Contact Us
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup

Canada: cancer and heart disease lead mortality, pneumonia grows but also assisted deaths are on the rise (article updated with a note from “Dying with Dignity”)

Marzio Pelù, January 18, 2026January 19, 2026

TORONTO – In 2024, Canada recorded 326,779 deaths, slightly down from 327,546 in the previous year, marking a 0.2% decrease. Preliminary data from the Canadian Vital Statistics – Death database highlight that cancer and heart disease remain the leading causes of death, ranking first among both men and women across all provinces and territories. 

According to the statement published by Statistics Canada (here), cancer accounted for more than a quarter of all deaths, at 26.2%, followed by heart disease at 17.7%. Other significant causes among the top ten included accidents (6.2%), stroke (4.2%), chronic lower respiratory diseases (4.0%), influenza and pneumonia (2.3%), diabetes (2.1%), Alzheimer’s disease (1.6%), COVID-19 (1.5%), and liver disease (1.4%).

Deaths from influenza and pneumonia saw a significant rise in 2024, moving from the eighth to the sixth leading cause of death, with a 20% increase compared to the previous year. A total of 7,658 people died from these respiratory illnesses, with over half of the deaths occurring among those aged 85 and older. Pneumonia alone caused 6,445 deaths, exceeding the numbers recorded in 2018. During the COVID-19 pandemic, influenza deaths had dropped sharply, while pneumonia deaths fell to a lesser extent, likely due to social distancing measures and the so-called “mortality displacement,” whereby those most vulnerable to pneumonia and influenza were also the most affected by COVID-19.

Meanwhile, COVID-19-related deaths continued to decline. In 2024, 5,056 Canadians died from the coronavirus, a 36.6% decrease from the 7,978 deaths reported in 2023, dropping COVID-19 from the sixth to the ninth leading cause of death. The elderly population remained the most affected, with those aged 85 and older accounting for more than half of the deaths, while only 1.2% of COVID-19 deaths occurred among people under 50.

Dementia is an increasingly significant cause of death, indirectly responsible for 27,825 deaths in 2024, up 4.8% from 2023. If included in the top ten causes of death, dementia would rank third, just behind cancer and heart disease. Most dementia-related deaths occurred among those aged 85 and older, with women representing nearly two-thirds of cases due to their longer life expectancy and biological factors.

Despite increases in certain causes of death, 2024 marked the second consecutive year of improvement in mortality rates across all age groups, following the peaks observed in 2021 and 2022 due to the pandemic. This improvement is also reflected in life expectancy at birth, which rose from 81.68 years in 2023 to 82.16 years in 2024, nearly reaching pre-pandemic 2019 levels (82.22 years).

One last figure not included in the Statistics Canada report is deaths from medically assisted suicide (euthanasia). According to the annual “Medical Assistance in Dying” (MAID) report released by the Canadian government, there were 16,499 assisted deaths in Canada in 2024, representing about 5.1% of all deaths in the country, marking a 6.9% increase compared to 2023. At this rate, medically assisted deaths risk becoming one of the leading causes of death in Canada.

UPDATE – After publishing this article, we received a note from Dying With Dignity Canada who offered us some clarification: “To be clear – writes Helen Long, CEO of Dying With Dignity Canada – MAID isn’t a “cause” of death. It is a manner of death and may be noted as such on the death certificate. It is important to remember that people are eligible for MAID due to their underlying medical conditions. In the  Sixth Annual Report on Medical Assistance in Dying in Canada it was noted that 95.6% of MAID provisions were in Track 1, meaning those people had reasonable foreseeable deaths. Cancer was the most frequently reported underlying medical condition, cited in 63.6% of cases. That is to say 63.6% of those choosing MAID had cancer and a reasonably foreseeable death.”

Photo by National Cancer Institute on Unsplash

Canada English Featured Health & Medicine News Updates

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts


Warning: Attempt to read property "user_nicename" on false in /home/cnmng/public_html/wp-includes/link-template.php on line 267

More money and tighter control to combat Covid-19


Warning: Attempt to read property "user_nicename" on false in /home/cnmng/public_html/wp-includes/link-template.php on line 267
April 20, 2021August 25, 2023

…

/home/cnmng/public_html/wp-includes/link-template.php on line 267
https://www.cnmng.ca/more-money-and-tighter-control-to-combat-covid-19/preferences/updates/"> Read More

Ontario, nuovi contagi e ricoveri in calo

September 21, 2021August 25, 2023

…

Read More
Canada

The miracle of Delta Flight 4819. All safe: “Heroic crew”

February 18, 2025February 18, 2025

…

Read More

Latest Articles

  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Minister Lecce and MPP Babikian put on the defensive re ethnic media April 17, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Miliardi ai media mainstream, bricioline per la stampa etnica April 17, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / “Fondi alle Province, il sistema non funziona” April 17, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Borse di studio per giovani “Italians” di origine toscana April 16, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Film Restores the Record on Italian Explorer April 16, 2026

Search Articles by Date

April 2026
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
« Mar    

Our Sponsors

Lido Construction Pascale_Di_Poce
©2026 Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes