Sentences with phrase «death data set»

Infant Mortality Statistics from the 1998 Period Linked Birth / Infant Death Data Set.

Not exact matches

But back to the data showing an increase in deaths by self - destruction for white Americans between the larger set of ages, ages 30 through 64.
It is a private data set in which isolated cases of death would only be isolated cases similar to this case that we're talking about today.
Since this data set is for 39,984 births, we can estimate the number of intrapartum deaths to be 4 — 12 intrapartum deaths (if, in fact, it was not 0.
All sorts of hilarious errors — using one type of data (ICD10 code data from «white healthy women» and essentially comparing the best possible data from one set of hospital data related to low - risk births to the worst possible single set of data related to high - risk at - home births)-- if you use the writer's same data source for hospital births but include all comers in 2007 - 2010 (not just low - risk healthy white women), the infant death rate is actually 6.14 per 1000, which is «300 % higher death rate than at - home births!»
There were so many unknowns in the MANA data it wouldn't shock me if there were deaths in that data set due to water birth.
A 21 percent rise in drug overdose deaths last year made unintentional injuries the third - leading cause of death in the country, according to data set for release by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
As associate professor and first - author Johan Bollen writes in an e-mail to Science Careers, they wanted their new system to «enable scientists to set their own priorities, fund scientists... not projects, avoid proposal writing and reviewing, avoid administrative burdens, encourage all scientists to participate collectively in the definition of scientific priorities, encourage innovation, reward scientists that make significant contributions to data, software, methods, and systems, avoid funding death spirals (no funding - > no research - > no funding) but still reward high levels of productivity, create the proper incentives for scholarly communication (publishing to communicate, not to improve bibliometrics), enable funding of daring and risky research, and so on.»
It was not long before data showed dramatic increases in the use prescription opioid medicines by teenagers, Volkow said, and set off alarm bells that «we had a problem with prescription medicines,» a 2003 discovery that was later underscored by a steep increase in overdose deaths among all users.
Along with the death rate of soldiers, he says, this is «the most significant data set in identifying whether or not you're making progress.»
And both the UN and ISAF data sets show a drop in deaths due to air strikes last year, by 50 % and 10 %, respectively.
To identify methodological categories, the outcome of each paper was classified according to a set of binary variables: 1 - outcome measured on biological material; 2 - outcome measured on human material; 3 - outcome exclusively behavioural (measures of behaviours and interactions between individuals, which in studies on people included surveys, interviews and social and economic data); 4 - outcome exclusively non-behavioural (physical, chemical and other measurable parameters including weight, height, death, presence / absence, number of individuals, etc...).
Had he chosen a different set of countries, the data would have shown that increasing the percent of calories from fat reduces the number of deaths from coronary heart disease.
In Death by Food Pyramid, Denise Minger absolutely skewers The China Study for its flawed data collection and distorted conclusions, and generally goes to great lengths to set the record straight about the flawed conventional wisdom we have been fed our entire lives.
«No matter how we sliced and diced the data from this large data set, we saw the same thing: There's an increased risk of death among PPI users,» said senior author Ziyad Al - Aly, M.D., an assistant professor of medicine.
Set in a future where everything we see is taped, Anon follows Detective Sal Frieland (Clive Owen) as he sets out to stop a murder who forces his victims to watch their own deaths - with the case eventually leading Sal to a hacker (Amanda Seyfried) responsible for erasing illicit data recorded by criminals.
But when he proposes links between his own historical field and that of climate science he drops all scholarly standards and quotes any old conference paper or telephone conversation he feels like; mad activists and conspiracy theorists like Oreskes and Powell; or Mark Maslin, a professor - cum - company director who combines his job at my old university as palaeontologist or geographer or climatologist (all descriptions of his expertise taken from «the Conversation») with that of director of Rezatec Ltd, a company set up by the Royal Society as a «Leading provider of data - as - a-service geospatial data analytics» to serve those who may be worried to death by forecasts of eco-doom to be found in the books and articles of Mark Maslin.
If there are raw data sets all over the world like this example (and there are of course), then there will be the death of a thousands graphs for global warming.
Many good surveys and data sets have died a slow death on meeting tables and in desk drawers.
Early childhood health and development trajectories for these children will be constructed via linkage to a range of administrative data sets relating to birth outcomes, congenital conditions, hospital admissions, emergency department presentations, receipt of ambulatory mental healthcare services, use of general practitioner services, contact with child protection and out - of - home care services, receipt of income assistance and fact of death.
In both data sets, divorce and death were associated with multiple negative outcomes among children.
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