An old saying is "A recession is when your neighbor loses his job, a depression is when you lose your job."
Statistics for most are largely meaningless unless personal. If a LOT of us knew people killed in car accidents each year, folks would be more upset. No one I've ever known has been killed in a car accident. The figure used to be 50-60,000 a year. It's the same with all categories of risk. Few humans deal well with probabilities of that ilk.
We say that driving is more dangerous than flying. Each flight disaster makes the news, a car accident makes the 11 PM news, perhaps, unless it's a busload of kids. A shooting of 3-4 people barely makes the local news, a mass shooting of 50 is news for a week, or more, even if they are somewhat rare (thankfully).
When I was a kid, quicksand worried the heck out of me. I've never seen any. Most of us die of issues associated with obesity or pulmonary issues. Think how dangerous smoking is for your health, and 20% of us do it routinely. My Grandad smoked for 60 years and just died of old age, they think.