No one as yet has mentioned the different sizes of voltage. Not many countries have all sockets at 230 volts. The canadians do have some, but they also have mainly 115V sockets, I think, for the less "heavy duty" appliances. Certainly most places in europe seem to have 115V. This smaller voltage should, I think, pose less of a threat to life due to the relationship of resistance=voltage/current. Any human has a given resistance (as indeed does and object at a fixed temperature) and therefore the higher the voltage applied, the more current will be pumped through the person.
Voltage may well have a large effect on the body just due to higher voltages doing more to mask the smaller voltages used in the nervous system. The higher risk of damage from electric shocks would be good cause for an earthing system. The theory in the earth being that there is negligeable resistance in the earth compared with a human so the electricity "takes the easy option" and flows to the ground through the earth, not the person. I don't think this fully answers the question, but hopefully may help point in the right direction.