I'm not finding more recent statistics, but according to this: "Most Americans die in hospitals (63 percent), and another 17 percent die in institutional settings such as long-term care facilities (Foley, 1995; Isaacs & Knickman, 1997)
hey can die any where but mostly in hospitals
Hospitals are a common source of discomfort and complaint for Americans as well as being a oft-cited phobia. Most people do not have to think about hospitals until they are a patient or visiting a patient, both of which are usually uncomfortable situations that are also associated withpain and discomfort. When confronted with the unhappy realities of death and dying, most people become upset.people also hate hospitals because hospitals is a place where diseases are found,and because they hate medicines and injections
The most Americans died in Vietnam which was also the longest war that America was involved in.
WW2.
Anywhere, but most often hospitals.
Yes. Most hospitals have a security force.
Yes, most all hospitals do have a storage facility to temporarily store the bodies of those that die within the hospital. Except for the very largest teaching hospitals they are not very big, most being the size of a walk-in refrigerator.
No, Vatican City has no major hospitals and most medical emergencies are taken care of at hospitals in Rome.
Heart disease, according to the CDC.
i may cuss so *********************************************but the anserw is 8762
Both sides, North and South, were considered Americans. So the total number of deaths were all Americans.
'hospitals' usually, though most often no healing took place in them.