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Lowest death rates in the world, top ten all Muslim countries - Incredible!

http://www.worldatlas.com/articles/the-countries-with-the-lowest-death-rates.html

The Countries with the Lowest Death Rates
Some countries have markedly low mortality rates, and the oil-rich nations in and around the Persian Gulf claim some of the lowest yet.


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Advancements in medicine and governmental healthcare policies are among the major contributing factors to low death rates in Persian Gulf countries such as Bahrain and Qatar.


Statistics shows that, every second, 1.8 humans die, and any random person currently has a 0.464% chance of dying within the year. Despite the ever-present threat of death, in some places it seems a more common event than others. According to a 2014 report by CIA World Fact Book, Qatar has the lowest death rate in the world. Crude death rates show the number of annual deaths occurring per 1000 members of the estimated population over a year-long period. Subtracting the crude death rate from the crude birth rate gives the rate of natural population change, which discounts net population changes resulting from migration patterns in and out of a country. According to the same CIA report and verified by other credible sources, nations of the Persian Gulf have the lowest death rates in the world.

Qatar's Leading Position in Low Death Rates
Qatar has the absolute lowest death rate in the world, with 1.53 deaths per 1000 people annually. One of the major reasons for its low number of annual deaths is its improved health care system. It has one of the best and most widely recognized health care systems and, as compared to other nations, Qatar’s health sector is renowned for its technologically advanced medical facilities and the offering of the best of patient care. With a population of 2,155,446 (2014 estimates), the country’s affluence has enabled the provision of medical care to most of its citizens.

Kuwait's Medical Advancements
According to international publications including the World Resource Institute, Kuwait had one of the lowest death rates globally, at 1.9 per 1000 people annually. The low death rates in Kuwait have been attributed to its high standards for medical services provided, high health awareness among citizens, a workforce of qualified medical practitioners, and the latest of technology in medical devices. However, according to the CIA report in 2014, the picture has taken a negative trajectory, as the death rate in Kuwait has increased to 2.18, with possible future increases yet to come.

Singapore's Healthcare System
In the Asian nation of Singapore, the crude death rate was low as well, standing at an annual rate of 4.3 deaths per 1000 people. The health system in Singapore was ranked 6th in the World Health Organizations rankings of the best health systems in the world, which is probably the driving force behind the nation’s low death rate. Singapore also has one of the highest life expectancies at birth, according to the CIA report. The CIA’s World Fact Book showed that recently the crude death rate has been reduced from 4.3 in 2000 to 3.3 in 2014, indicating an even more positive outlook than before.

Bahrain's Fluctuations
Since official national death registrations began in Bahrain in 1990, the country has continually registered low mortality rates. The death rate in Bahrain was 1.9 deaths per 1000 people in 2011, also placing it among the lowest in the world, even lower than the death rates seen in Singapore, Libya, Oman, and Brunei. In 2010, the population of Bahrain stood at 1,234,571, which is even smaller than that of Qatar. The government of Bahrain provides for the majority of its citizens’ health services, which is highly subsidized, and this serves as the primary explanation behind the low death rate in Bahrain. Nonetheless, the death rate had increased to 2.69 by 2014, a discouraging trend reported by the CIA World Fact Book.

How Will Mortality Rates Change In the Future?
Globally, there are around twenty countries with a death rate below 4.5 per 1000. Among a few of these selected countries, however, the death rate is trending upward and is projected to continue to increase in the near future. As global population rates decrease and the average age of populations becomes older, death rates will increase. Indeed, looking at the situation in mathematical terms based on historical demographic patterns, it becomes intuitive that death rates below five are likely unsustainable, especially in the midst of a changing global economic environment and the current worldwide fight against terrorism. At the same time many countries with high mortality rates have the potential to decrease them by making their peoples more secure and improving their medical infrastructure and standards for occupational safety.

Lowest Death Rates Worldwide
Rank Country Death Rate (1 per 1,000)
1 Qatar 1.53 %
2 United Arab Emirates 1.97 %
3 Kuwait 2.18 %
4 Bahrain 2.69 %
5 Saudi Arabia 3.33 %
6 Oman 3.36 %
7 Singapore 3.43 %
8 Brunei 3.52 %
9 Libya 3.58 %
10 Northern Mariana Islands 3.71 %
11 Iraq 3.77 %
12 Jordan 3.79 %
13 Solomon Islands 3.85 %
14 Maldives 3.89 %
15 Syria 4.00 %
16 Vanuatu 4.09 %
17 Marshall Islands 4.21 %
18 Micronesia, Federated States of 4.23 %
19 Algeria 4.31 %
20 Costa Rica 4.55 %
21 Dominican Republic 4.55 %
22 Anguilla 4.57 %
23 Paraguay 4.68 %
24 American Samoa 4.75 %
25 Egypt 4.77 %
26 Guatemala 4.77 %
 
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Islamic law enforcement makes low crime rate
Simple
As any criminology student can tell you, it may not be that simple. For example, rape statistics may turn out to be lower not necessarily because rape perpetrators are punished harshly and there is less rape but because rape is reported less if reporting it (also) results in punishment of the victim. Rape statistics are also affected by how they are defined in each country and what is counted as one incident (each and every single occurrance with one person, or each person, even if that person has been raped multiple time by the same perp e.g. in domestic situations).

highest suicide rate in the world
Deaths from self-inflicted injuries per 100,000 inhabitants in 2004
940px-Self-inflicted_injuries_world_map_-_Death_-_WHO2004.svg.png

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemiology_of_suicide

Suicide rate per 100,000 males (data from 1978–2008)
940px-Suicide_world_map_-_2009_Male.svg.png



Suicide rate per 100,000 females (data from 1978–2008).
940px-Suicide_world_map_-_2009_Female%2C2.svg.png




Suicide rates are highest in Europe's Baltic states, where around 40 people per 100,000 die by suicide each year. The lowest rates are found mainly in Caribbean/West Indies nations and a few countries in Asia.
As many as 60,000 people commit suicide in Russia every year; approximately 30,000 people die by suicide each year in the United States; over 30,000 kill themselves in Japan; and about 25,000 commit suicide each year in China. In western countries men commit suicide at four times the rate of women. Women are more likely to attempt suicide than men.
The countries of the former Soviet Bloc have the highest suicide rate in the world. Rate of suicide in South Korea is the highest among any other East Asian countries. The region with the lowest suicide rate is Latin America. China is the only country in the world where the rate of suicide by women matches that of men, with statistics even showing a slightly higher number of female cases.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemiology_of_suicide#By_region

List by the World Health Organization (2012)
Suicides per 100,000 people per year
(both sexes)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_suicide_rate
1 Guyana
2 South Korea
3 Sri Lanka
4 Lithuania
5 Suriname
6 Mozambique
7 Tanzania
7 Nepal
9 Kazakhstan
10 Burundi
11 India
12 South Sudan
13 Turkmenistan
14 Russia
14 Uganda
16 Hungary
17 Japan
18 Belarus
19 Zimbabwe
20 Bhutan
21 Sudan
22 Comoros
23 Ukraine
24 Poland
24 Equatorial Guinea
26 Eritrea
27 Latvia
27 Kenya
29 Malawi
30 Zambia
 
.
As any criminology student can tell you, it may not be that simple. For example, rape statistics may turn out to be lower not necessarily because rape perpetrators are punished harshly and there is less rape but because rape is reported less if reporting it (also) results in punishment of the victim. Rape statistics are also affected by how they are defined in each country and what is counted as one incident (each and every single occurrance with one person, or each person, even if that person has been raped multiple time by the same perp e.g. in domestic situations).


Deaths from self-inflicted injuries per 100,000 inhabitants in 2004
940px-Self-inflicted_injuries_world_map_-_Death_-_WHO2004.svg.png

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemiology_of_suicide

Suicide rate per 100,000 males (data from 1978–2008)
940px-Suicide_world_map_-_2009_Male.svg.png



Suicide rate per 100,000 females (data from 1978–2008).
940px-Suicide_world_map_-_2009_Female%2C2.svg.png




Suicide rates are highest in Europe's Baltic states, where around 40 people per 100,000 die by suicide each year. The lowest rates are found mainly in Caribbean/West Indies nations and a few countries in Asia.
As many as 60,000 people commit suicide in Russia every year; approximately 30,000 people die by suicide each year in the United States; over 30,000 kill themselves in Japan; and about 25,000 commit suicide each year in China. In western countries men commit suicide at four times the rate of women. Women are more likely to attempt suicide than men.
The countries of the former Soviet Bloc have the highest suicide rate in the world. Rate of suicide in South Korea is the highest among any other East Asian countries. The region with the lowest suicide rate is Latin America. China is the only country in the world where the rate of suicide by women matches that of men, with statistics even showing a slightly higher number of female cases.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemiology_of_suicide#By_region

List by the World Health Organization (2012)
Suicides per 100,000 people per year
(both sexes)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_suicide_rate
1 Guyana
2 South Korea
3 Sri Lanka
4 Lithuania
5 Suriname
6 Mozambique
7 Tanzania
7 Nepal
9 Kazakhstan
10 Burundi
11 India
12 South Sudan
13 Turkmenistan
14 Russia
14 Uganda
16 Hungary
17 Japan
18 Belarus
19 Zimbabwe
20 Bhutan
21 Sudan
22 Comoros
23 Ukraine
24 Poland
24 Equatorial Guinea
26 Eritrea
27 Latvia
27 Kenya
29 Malawi
30 Zambia
I spent my childhood in middle East and I know for sure why there is less crime dew to high punishments
Even on rest of countries that implements strick rules to crime they avoid that even a person wait on junction to turn light into green so he can pass otherwise he will hv to pay fine
Fear of fine make him pbbey the system

I spent my childhood in middle East and I know for sure why there is less crime dew to high punishments
Even on rest of countries that implements strick rules to crime they avoid that even a person wait on junction to turn light into green so he can pass otherwise he will hv to pay fine
Fear of fine make him pbbey the system
Obeying
 
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Actually it is the indication to ISIS to target them.
 
. . .
I spent my childhood in middle East and I know for sure why there is less crime dew to high punishments
Even on rest of countries that implements strick rules to crime they avoid that even a person wait on junction to turn light into green so he can pass otherwise he will hv to pay fine
Fear of fine make him pbbey the system
Obeying

Nothing in your post negates what I said about crime statistics, especially in comparative perspective.
 
. . .
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