Death Rates Table
Death Rate Report for Illinois by County
Lung & Bronchus, 2019-2023
All Races (includes Hispanic), Both Sexes, All Ages
Sorted by Count
County
|
2023 Rural-Urban Continuum Codes Φ
|
Met Healthy People Objective of 25.1? |
Age-Adjusted Death Rate † deaths per 100,000 (95% Confidence Interval)
|
CI*Rank ⋔ (95% Confidence Interval)
|
Average Annual Count
|
Recent Trend |
Recent 5-Year Trend ‡ in Death Rates (95% Confidence Interval)
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Illinois | N/A | No | 33.7 (33.3, 34.1) | N/A | 5,448 |
falling
|
-4.2 (-4.7, -3.9) |
| United States | N/A | No | 31.5 (31.4, 31.6) | N/A | 134,731 |
falling
|
-3.7 (-3.9, -3.5) |
| Scott County | Rural | No | 50.3 (29.4, 82.6) | 25 (1, 99) | 3 |
|
|
| Gallatin County | Rural | No | 41.1 (24.7, 68.3) | 64 (1, 99) | 3 |
falling
|
-15.9 (-45.4, -2.9) |
| Stark County | Urban | No | 40.3 (23.6, 66.6) | 69 (1, 99) | 3 |
falling
|
-3.1 (-6.0, -0.6) |
| Hardin County | Rural | No | 56.6 (34.1, 93.9) | 6 (1, 99) | 4 |
stable
|
-1.1 (-4.9, 2.2) |
| Putnam County | Rural | No | 42.9 (26.7, 68.4) | 54 (1, 99) | 4 |
stable
|
-1.2 (-4.5, 2.3) |
| Pulaski County | Rural | No | 53.8 (33.9, 84.0) | 15 (1, 98) | 4 |
stable
|
0.2 (-2.9, 3.3) |
| Schuyler County | Rural | No | 39.0 (24.9, 60.4) | 72 (2, 99) | 4 |
stable
|
-0.6 (-3.3, 2.2) |
| Jasper County | Rural | No | 34.8 (22.4, 52.9) | 85 (6, 99) | 5 |
stable
|
-2.0 (-5.4, 0.9) |
| Cumberland County | Rural | No | 33.8 (22.1, 50.6) | 87 (9, 99) | 5 |
stable
|
-1.6 (-5.9, 2.3) |
| Henderson County | Rural | No | 43.4 (28.5, 66.3) | 49 (2, 99) | 5 |
falling
|
-2.3 (-4.8, -0.1) |
| Hamilton County | Rural | No | 44.6 (30.0, 65.4) | 42 (2, 99) | 6 |
stable
|
-1.3 (-4.4, 1.8) |
| Edwards County | Rural | No | 64.2 (42.9, 94.1) | 3 (1, 91) | 6 |
stable
|
-1.8 (-5.9, 1.9) |
| Menard County | Urban | No | 37.9 (26.1, 54.0) | 75 (6, 99) | 6 |
stable
|
-1.3 (-3.3, 0.8) |
| Cass County | Rural | No | 42.2 (29.2, 59.5) | 60 (2, 99) | 7 |
falling
|
-27.6 (-41.2, -9.2) |
| Johnson County | Rural | No | 36.2 (25.4, 50.8) | 80 (10, 99) | 7 |
stable
|
-2.4 (-4.8, 0.0) |
| Washington County | Rural | No | 33.1 (23.2, 46.6) | 89 (21, 99) | 7 |
stable
|
-1.4 (-4.2, 1.3) |
| Alexander County | Urban | No | 81.5 (56.5, 116.5) | 1 (1, 59) | 7 |
stable
|
-1.2 (-4.1, 1.2) |
| Wabash County | Rural | No | 43.7 (30.6, 61.4) | 47 (2, 99) | 7 |
falling
|
-2.6 (-5.1, -0.5) |
| Marshall County | Urban | No | 41.5 (29.5, 57.7) | 62 (4, 99) | 8 |
stable
|
-1.7 (-3.9, 0.3) |
| Moultrie County | Rural | No | 42.6 (30.7, 58.0) | 57 (3, 99) | 8 |
stable
|
-2.0 (-4.1, 0.0) |
| Piatt County | Urban | No | 35.4 (25.4, 48.5) | 81 (16, 99) | 8 |
falling
|
-2.3 (-4.6, -0.2) |
| Bond County | Urban | No | 43.3 (31.9, 58.0) | 50 (3, 99) | 10 |
falling
|
-2.7 (-5.3, -0.4) |
| Carroll County | Rural | No | 37.8 (27.7, 51.0) | 76 (11, 99) | 10 |
falling
|
-2.2 (-4.0, -0.7) |
| Greene County | Rural | No | 52.1 (38.5, 69.9) | 21 (1, 91) | 10 |
stable
|
-0.6 (-2.9, 1.6) |
| Lawrence County | Rural | No | 47.9 (35.5, 63.8) | 32 (2, 95) | 10 |
stable
|
-1.1 (-3.3, 1.1) |
| White County | Rural | No | 45.0 (33.3, 60.2) | 41 (2, 98) | 10 |
falling
|
-2.3 (-4.5, -0.5) |
| Clark County | Rural | No | 44.3 (33.0, 58.7) | 44 (3, 98) | 10 |
stable
|
-1.6 (-3.6, 0.2) |
| Clay County | Rural | No | 56.4 (42.3, 74.4) | 7 (1, 85) | 11 |
stable
|
-0.1 (-2.0, 1.8) |
| Ford County | Urban | No | 54.8 (41.1, 72.2) | 12 (1, 88) | 11 |
stable
|
-0.1 (-2.2, 2.1) |
| Richland County | Rural | No | 48.2 (36.3, 63.3) | 31 (2, 94) | 11 |
stable
|
-0.3 (-2.0, 1.4) |
| Warren County | Rural | No | 47.2 (35.6, 61.8) | 34 (3, 95) | 11 |
stable
|
-1.6 (-3.7, 0.3) |
| Crawford County | Rural | No | 42.7 (32.4, 55.6) | 56 (5, 98) | 11 |
falling
|
-18.6 (-34.4, -4.4) |
| Massac County | Urban | No | 54.9 (41.7, 71.7) | 11 (1, 86) | 12 |
stable
|
-1.3 (-2.9, 0.4) |
| De Witt County | Rural | No | 53.6 (41.0, 69.4) | 16 (1, 88) | 12 |
stable
|
-1.3 (-3.2, 0.5) |
| Pike County | Rural | No | 52.5 (40.2, 68.0) | 19 (1, 86) | 12 |
stable
|
-0.3 (-2.8, 2.1) |
| Wayne County | Rural | No | 46.4 (35.5, 60.3) | 37 (3, 96) | 12 |
falling
|
-2.4 (-4.3, -0.7) |
| Edgar County | Rural | No | 42.8 (32.7, 55.7) | 55 (6, 97) | 12 |
falling
|
-2.4 (-4.4, -0.6) |
| Perry County | Rural | No | 42.4 (32.4, 54.9) | 59 (6, 97) | 12 |
falling
|
-1.8 (-3.3, -0.4) |
| Douglas County | Rural | No | 48.7 (37.4, 62.7) | 27 (2, 91) | 13 |
stable
|
-0.8 (-2.7, 0.9) |
| Hancock County | Rural | No | 41.8 (32.0, 54.4) | 61 (5, 98) | 13 |
falling
|
-1.8 (-3.7, -0.1) |
| Union County | Rural | No | 48.6 (37.6, 62.5) | 28 (2, 89) | 13 |
stable
|
-1.5 (-3.8, 0.7) |
| Mason County | Rural | No | 65.0 (50.3, 83.4) | 2 (1, 59) | 14 |
stable
|
0.0 (-2.4, 2.5) |
| Mercer County | Urban | No | 54.6 (42.3, 69.9) | 13 (1, 82) | 14 |
rising
|
1.6 (0.1, 3.3) |
| Jo Daviess County | Rural | No | 30.2 (23.6, 39.0) | 94 (54, 99) | 14 |
falling
|
-2.5 (-4.8, -0.3) |
| McDonough County | Rural | No | 41.3 (32.3, 52.3) | 63 (8, 97) | 15 |
stable
|
-1.5 (-3.8, 0.7) |
| Shelby County | Rural | No | 42.4 (33.2, 54.0) | 58 (7, 95) | 15 |
stable
|
-1.3 (-3.1, 0.4) |
| Fayette County | Rural | No | 55.7 (44.3, 69.4) | 9 (1, 76) | 16 |
stable
|
-0.4 (-1.6, 1.0) |
| Monroe County | Urban | No | 32.9 (26.1, 41.2) | 90 (43, 99) | 16 |
stable
|
-1.5 (-3.1, 0.3) |
| Clinton County | Urban | No | 32.7 (25.9, 40.8) | 92 (40, 99) | 17 |
falling
|
-2.0 (-3.6, -0.6) |
| Jersey County | Urban | No | 52.6 (41.9, 65.6) | 18 (2, 80) | 17 |
stable
|
-0.3 (-2.1, 1.5) |
| Woodford County | Urban | No | 33.6 (26.9, 41.6) | 88 (40, 99) | 18 |
stable
|
-0.8 (-2.6, 1.1) |
| Effingham County | Rural | No | 40.4 (32.6, 49.7) | 68 (13, 96) | 19 |
falling
|
-1.9 (-3.3, -0.6) |
| Saline County | Rural | No | 52.0 (42.1, 63.9) | 22 (2, 78) | 19 |
falling
|
-2.5 (-3.7, -1.4) |
| Iroquois County | Rural | No | 44.5 (36.0, 54.8) | 43 (7, 91) | 20 |
stable
|
-0.9 (-2.3, 0.4) |
| Livingston County | Rural | No | 39.1 (31.7, 47.8) | 71 (21, 97) | 20 |
falling
|
-3.0 (-15.8, -1.3) |
| Logan County | Rural | No | 54.6 (44.9, 66.0) | 14 (1, 67) | 22 |
stable
|
0.8 (-1.1, 2.9) |
| Bureau County | Rural | No | 39.1 (32.2, 47.4) | 70 (20, 96) | 22 |
falling
|
-2.2 (-3.5, -1.0) |
| Boone County | Urban | No | 32.7 (27.0, 39.5) | 91 (53, 99) | 23 |
falling
|
-4.4 (-13.6, -2.2) |
| Randolph County | Rural | No | 48.9 (40.3, 59.0) | 26 (3, 82) | 23 |
stable
|
-0.9 (-2.6, 0.8) |
| Montgomery County | Rural | No | 55.7 (45.9, 67.2) | 10 (1, 60) | 23 |
stable
|
-1.1 (-2.3, 0.1) |
| Morgan County | Rural | No | 47.1 (38.9, 56.8) | 35 (5, 85) | 23 |
falling
|
-1.7 (-2.8, -0.6) |
| Lee County | Rural | No | 43.9 (36.2, 53.0) | 45 (10, 90) | 24 |
stable
|
-2.0 (-4.2, 0.2) |
| Christian County | Rural | No | 53.2 (44.4, 63.5) | 17 (2, 66) | 26 |
falling
|
-2.5 (-3.8, -1.3) |
| Coles County | Rural | No | 43.0 (35.9, 51.3) | 52 (13, 89) | 26 |
falling
|
-2.5 (-4.0, -1.1) |
| Stephenson County | Rural | No | 35.2 (29.2, 42.1) | 82 (41, 98) | 26 |
falling
|
-2.3 (-3.7, -1.0) |
| Franklin County | Rural | No | 46.6 (38.9, 55.5) | 36 (7, 83) | 27 |
falling
|
-7.2 (-18.6, -3.3) |
| Jefferson County | Rural | No | 52.4 (44.0, 62.2) | 20 (2, 67) | 28 |
stable
|
-1.0 (-2.4, 0.5) |
| Jackson County | Rural | No | 45.8 (38.5, 54.2) | 39 (8, 82) | 29 |
stable
|
-0.6 (-1.6, 0.5) |
| Fulton County | Rural | No | 58.5 (49.4, 69.0) | 5 (1, 51) | 30 |
stable
|
-0.6 (-1.9, 0.7) |
| Grundy County | Urban | No | 51.8 (43.8, 60.8) | 23 (2, 69) | 31 |
falling
|
-1.2 (-2.3, -0.1) |
| Marion County | Rural | No | 56.0 (47.3, 66.0) | 8 (1, 57) | 31 |
stable
|
-0.9 (-2.3, 0.3) |
| Henry County | Urban | No | 40.8 (34.7, 47.9) | 65 (19, 89) | 32 |
falling
|
-1.4 (-2.6, -0.1) |
| Macoupin County | Urban | No | 46.4 (39.4, 54.5) | 38 (8, 81) | 32 |
falling
|
-1.4 (-2.9, -0.1) |
| Ogle County | Rural | No | 43.0 (36.5, 50.4) | 53 (13, 86) | 32 |
falling
|
-1.6 (-2.6, -0.5) |
| Kendall County | Urban | No | 30.6 (26.1, 35.7) | 93 (66, 99) | 34 |
falling
|
-2.8 (-4.1, -1.3) |
| Whiteside County | Rural | No | 40.5 (34.8, 47.1) | 67 (23, 90) | 36 |
falling
|
-2.0 (-3.1, -1.0) |
| DeKalb County | Urban | No | 36.9 (31.8, 42.6) | 78 (41, 93) | 38 |
falling
|
-1.2 (-2.2, -0.2) |
| Knox County | Rural | No | 48.3 (41.6, 55.9) | 30 (6, 72) | 39 |
falling
|
-1.7 (-2.6, -0.9) |
| Adams County | Rural | No | 38.4 (33.2, 44.4) | 73 (33, 92) | 39 |
falling
|
-1.9 (-2.8, -1.0) |
| Williamson County | Rural | No | 51.2 (45.0, 58.1) | 24 (4, 59) | 50 |
stable
|
-1.3 (-2.9, 0.3) |
| Champaign County | Urban | No | 29.0 (25.8, 32.5) | 95 (80, 99) | 61 |
falling
|
-3.3 (-4.0, -2.6) |
| Kankakee County | Urban | No | 43.3 (38.5, 48.6) | 51 (22, 79) | 61 |
falling
|
-8.2 (-13.5, -5.5) |
| Vermilion County | Rural | No | 60.9 (54.4, 68.2) | 4 (1, 28) | 66 |
stable
|
-0.8 (-1.7, 0.1) |
| McLean County | Urban | No | 34.9 (31.2, 39.0) | 84 (56, 94) | 66 |
falling
|
-2.6 (-5.0, -2.0) |
| Macon County | Urban | No | 48.5 (43.6, 53.8) | 29 (10, 64) | 76 |
falling
|
-2.3 (-8.4, -1.5) |
| Rock Island County | Urban | No | 36.3 (32.7, 40.2) | 79 (52, 92) | 78 |
falling
|
-3.6 (-5.9, -2.6) |
| La Salle County | Rural | No | 47.5 (42.8, 52.6) | 33 (10, 64) | 78 |
falling
|
-1.5 (-2.4, -0.8) |
| Tazewell County | Urban | No | 43.4 (39.3, 47.9) | 48 (24, 76) | 83 |
falling
|
-4.7 (-12.5, -2.1) |
| Sangamon County | Urban | No | 37.6 (34.3, 41.0) | 77 (50, 89) | 104 |
falling
|
-3.1 (-5.9, -2.4) |
| Peoria County | Urban | No | 43.8 (40.1, 47.7) | 46 (24, 73) | 106 |
falling
|
-3.2 (-5.9, -2.3) |
| McHenry County | Urban | No | 34.0 (31.4, 36.8) | 86 (66, 93) | 128 |
stable
|
0.7 (-3.8, 3.9) |
| St. Clair County | Urban | No | 40.5 (37.4, 43.8) | 66 (39, 79) | 132 |
falling
|
-5.6 (-12.9, -2.6) |
| Winnebago County | Urban | No | 38.3 (35.6, 41.2) | 74 (50, 86) | 149 |
falling
|
-4.2 (-5.2, -3.4) |
| Madison County | Urban | No | 45.1 (42.0, 48.4) | 40 (24, 66) | 164 |
falling
|
-1.8 (-2.6, -1.0) |
| Kane County | Urban | No | 27.8 (25.9, 29.8) | 97 (87, 99) | 165 |
falling
|
-4.8 (-11.2, -3.3) |
| Lake County | Urban | No | 27.7 (26.1, 29.4) | 98 (88, 99) | 230 |
falling
|
-3.1 (-3.6, -2.6) |
| Will County | Urban | No | 35.0 (33.1, 37.0) | 83 (66, 90) | 264 |
falling
|
-5.0 (-8.5, -3.2) |
| DuPage County | Urban | Yes | 24.6 (23.4, 26.0) | 99 (95, 99) | 289 |
falling
|
-4.4 (-6.2, -3.6) |
| Cook County | Urban | No | 28.5 (28.0, 29.2) | 96 (87, 98) | 1,776 |
falling
|
-5.2 (-6.4, -4.4) |
| Brown County | Rural | *** |
|
|
|
|
|
| Calhoun County | Urban | *** |
|
|
|
|
|
| Pope County | Rural | *** |
|
|
|
|
|
Notes:
Created by statecancerprofiles.cancer.gov on 03/22/2026 2:38 pm.
State Cancer Registries may provide more current or more local data.
Trend
Rising when 95% confidence interval of average annual percent change is above 0.
Stable when 95% confidence interval of average annual percent change includes 0.
Falling when 95% confidence interval of average annual percent change is below 0.
Rising when 95% confidence interval of average annual percent change is above 0.
Stable when 95% confidence interval of average annual percent change includes 0.
Falling when 95% confidence interval of average annual percent change is below 0.
† Death data provided by the National Vital Statistics System public use data file. Death rates calculated by the National Cancer Institute using SEER*Stat. Death rates are age-adjusted to the 2000 US standard population (20 age groups: <1, 1-4, 5-9, ... , 80-84, 85-89, 90+).
The Healthy People 2030 goals are based on rates adjusted using different methods but the differences should be minimal.
Population counts for denominators are based on Census populations as modified by NCI.
The US Population Data File is used with mortality data.
‡ The Average Annual Percent Change (AAPC) is based on the APCs calculated by Joinpoint. Due to data availability issues, the time period used in the calculation of the joinpoint regression model may differ for selected counties.
⋔ Results presented with the CI*Rank statistics help show the usefulness of ranks. For example, ranks for relatively rare diseases or less populated areas may be essentially meaningless because of their large variability, but ranks for more common diseases in densely populated regions can be very useful. More information about methodology can be found on the CI*Rank website.
When displaying county information, the CI*Rank for the state is not shown because it's not comparable. To see the state CI*Rank please view the statistics at the US By State level.
Healthy People 2030 Objectives provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Φ Rural–urban county classifications are based on the 2023 USDA Rural–Urban Continuum Codes (except for Connecticut Counties which use 2013 codes). State-level cancer rates for rural areas are calculated using cancer cases registered exclusively in rural counties, while state-level cancer rates for urban areas are calculated using cases registered exclusively in urban counties.
* Data has been suppressed to ensure confidentiality and stability of rate estimates. Counts are suppressed if fewer than 16 records were reported in a specific area-sex-race category.
If an average count of 3 is shown, the total number of cases for the time period is 16 or more which exceeds suppression threshold (but is rounded to 3).
Data for United States does not include Puerto Rico.


