Sentences with phrase «death data from»

Using cause of death data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Geronimus and colleagues calculated that if black people died at the same rate as whites, 5.8 million African Americans would have died between 1970 and 2004.
Using cause of death data from the US Centers for Disease Control, Geronimus and colleagues calculated that if blacks died at the same rate as whites, 5.8 million African Americans would have died between 1970 and 2004.
Leonid Gavrilov and Natalia Gavrilova at the University of Chicago gathered birth and death data from more than 1500 centenarians born in the US between 1880 and 1895.
And if you look at cause - of - death data from 100 years ago vs today, why yes, we are dying of non-communicable diseases.

Not exact matches

These odds above are based on a previous analysis by Business Insider, and the data primarily come from a 2016 report by the National Safety Council and the National Center for Health Statistics» final 2013 report on causes of death in the US, which was released in February 2016.
Shortly before his death, Goldberg told CNBC's «Squawk Box» that SurveyMonkey had «moved from a great software tool that individuals use, mostly still at work, to being a platform that both individuals and enterprises are using, and we're building data businesses.»
Safety experts point to the numbers: U.S. pedestrian deaths have been on the rise, with 5,376 in 2015 and nearly 6,000 last year, the most in two decades and up 22 percent from 2014, according to data compiled by the Governors Highway Safety Association for a recent report.
The data primarily come from a 2017 report by the National Safety Council and a National Center for Health Statistics» report on causes of death in the US for 2014.
The first two points are limited in the impact they demonstrate: The Temple study showed no decrease in DUI deaths on weekends, when the cost of UberX rides tends to rise with demand - based pricing, while the data from Seattle is only from that one city.
«Among both groups, patients taking Entresto had a 20 % or greater reduction in cardiovascular death or heart failure hospitalization compared to those taking enalapril,» Novartis said in a statement, citing conclusions based on analysis of data from the PARADIGM - HF study.
Earlier this month, social science researchers published an analysis of mortality data from the Puerto Rico Vital Statistics System to compare the historical death averages for September and October to deaths this year.
Data on deaths from cirrhosis of the liver (per 100,000 of the population) are available, e.g. Australia — 5.0 %; Austria — 15.6 %; Belgium — 8.2 %; Canada — 5.2 %; Denmark — 6.4 %; England — 2.6 %; France — 31 9 %; W. Germany — i 2.4 %; Italy — i 3.9 %; Israel — 3.3 %; Japan — 8.6 %; Netherlands — 3.4 %; Sweden — 4.4 %; Switzerland — i 3.1 %; U.S.A. — i0.2 %.
Data from the U.S. National Sudden Death in Young Athletes Registry support pre-participation screening to prospectively identify athletes with sickle cell trait and to promote training modifications and precautions.
Last Summer, ACOG «leaked» data from a study to be published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology stating that planned home births carried a 2 - 3 fold increase in neonatal death compared with hospital births.
No matter that it comports with the data from Oregon that shows that PLANNED homebirth with a LICENSED homebirth midwife has a death rate 9X higher than comparable risk hospital birth or that MANA has found that its own members have such hideous death rates that they have been desperately hiding them for years.
The data from the Netherlands shows that low risk birth with a Dutch midwife has a HIGHER death rate than high risk birth with a Dutch obstetrician.
Evidently, they are taking a page out of the playbook of the Midwives Alliance of North America (MANA), the organization that represents homebirth midwives, who conducted a publicly announced collection of safety data from 24,000 planned homebirths and now are hiding how many deaths occurred at the hands of homebirth midwives.
And I emphasized to the interviewer that American women need to be aware of the biggest red flag of all: MANA (Midwives Alliance of North America), the trade and lobbying organization for homebirth midwives, has collected neonatal death rates for homebirth since 2001 but they are hiding that data from American women.
The second sentence in the abstract does state: «Analysis of combined data from all 8 studies showed a three-fold increase in risk of neonatal deaths for homebirth attended by midwives, compared to hospital births.»
I've used the CDC Wonder data from 2003 - 2008 to demonstrate that in each year, planned homebirth with a homebirth midwives has a neonatal death rate anywhere from 3 - 7X higher than hospital birth.
Because they still have poor head control and often experience flexion of the head while in a sitting position, infants younger than 1 month in sitting devices might be at increased risk of upper airway obstruction and oxygen desaturation.128, — , 132 In addition, there is increasing concern about injuries from falls resulting from car seats being placed on elevated surfaces.133, — , 137 An analysis of CPSC data revealed 15 suffocation deaths between 1990 and 1997 resulting from car seats overturning after being placed on a bed, mattress, or couch.136 The CPSC also warns about the suffocation hazard to infants, particularly those who are younger than 4 months, who are carried in infant sling carriers.138 When infant slings are used for carrying, it is important to ensure that the infant's head is up and above the fabric, the face is visible, and that the nose and mouth are clear of obstructions.
While I have been a little torn in the past about agreeing with the recommendation of the American Academy of Pediatrics for a «ban on the manufacture and sale of mobile infant walkers,» I do now agree «because data indicate a considerable risk of major and minor injury and even death from the use of walkers, and because there is no clear benefit from their use.»
Taking the data from the document you linked to, I come up with these numbers (using term fetal deaths, from the table, and not intrapartum deaths):
Data to supplement incomplete death reports during 1988 - 90 were sought from state perinatal data collections and registry data in one stData to supplement incomplete death reports during 1988 - 90 were sought from state perinatal data collections and registry data in one stdata collections and registry data in one stdata in one state.
PALL participated in data analysis, designed and conducted perinatal death audit, sought additional data from perinatal data collections, performed comparative analyses of home birth and national perinatal death data, and contributed to the paper.
MJNCK reviewed all perinatal deaths, analysed perinatal death data, performed statistical analyses on study data and data from comparable home birth studies, and cowrote the paper.
Two additional births resulting in deaths were identified from other sources; these were confirmed by state perinatal data collections.
The best data on the practice comes from Oregon, which in 2012 started requiring that birth and death certificates include information on where the birth occurred and who attended it.
We analyzed data from Oregon state birth, infant death, and fetal death certificates from January 1, 2012, through December 31, 2013 (certificates were provided by the Oregon Center for Health Statistics).
For a third point, why don't you actually lay - out the risks of infant death that the data shows result from bed - sharing... rather than exhort folk to do so because it is «natural»?
For their study, the authors examined data from death certificates for U.S. infants 1 year old and younger.
Infant Mortality Statistics from the 1998 Period Linked Birth / Infant Death Data Set.
Learn about data trends on Sudden Unexpected Sleep Death in the U.S. from the Centers for Disease Control.
The «unexpected deaths» were based on data from an industry - funded, academic - researcher - run clinical trial described in two papers published in 1999 and 2000.
Excluding deaths from congenital anomalies, «special causes» (terrorism), and external causes (vehicle accidents, poisonings), which I suspect were not part of the MANAStats data either, it falls to 0.37
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!»
Using data from the Consumer Product Safety Commission's (CPSC) files, Dr. Bradley Thach, a pediatrician from Washington University in St. Louis, concluded that 27 babies» deaths between the years 1985 to 2005 could be attributed to crib bumper pads.
No, I don't believe that there is a 3 - 4 fold risk of perinatal death at home birth because as I said in my comment, we don't have the intrapartum data from hospitals in order to even make an apples to apples comparison.
On average, there is one death per year due to these products based on data from 2007 - 2009.
0.41 / 1000 early neonatal death rate in the MANA study compared to 0.46 / 1000 early neonatal death rate from national data; 0.35 / 1000 late neonatal death rate in the MANA study compared to 0.33 / 1000 late neonatal death rate from national data.
In this latest report, researchers from the CDC, FDA, and CPSC reviewed data on deaths related to infant sleep positioners from January 1997 to March 2011.
When she compared Daviss and Johnson's home - birth figures with data on hospital births in 2000 from the National Center for Health Statistics, she found that for women with comparable risks, the perinatal death rate was almost three times higher in home births.
Most of the alarmist studies come from data pulled from vital - statistics data, from birth certificates and infant death certificates that are linked together.
A recent report by Thach et al, 196 who used CPSC data, found that deaths attributed to bumper pads were from 3 mechanisms: (1) suffocation against soft, pillow - like bumper pads; (2) entrapment between the mattress or crib and firm bumper pads; and (3) strangulation from bumper pad ties.
Effect of early infant feeding practices on infection - specific neonatal mortality: an investigation of the causal links with observational data from rural Ghana Karen M Edmond, Betty R Kirkwood, Seeba Amenga - Etego, Seth Owusu - Agyei, and Lisa S Hurt Beginning Breastfeeding From First Day of Life Reduces Infection Related Deaths in Newborns by 2.6 tifrom rural Ghana Karen M Edmond, Betty R Kirkwood, Seeba Amenga - Etego, Seth Owusu - Agyei, and Lisa S Hurt Beginning Breastfeeding From First Day of Life Reduces Infection Related Deaths in Newborns by 2.6 tiFrom First Day of Life Reduces Infection Related Deaths in Newborns by 2.6 times.
When monthly mortality data for 2010/11 were compared with the five - year average of deaths occurring between 2005/06 and 2009/10 in the relevant months (Figure 2), the number of deaths were about the same as, or lower than, average in every month apart from December 2010.
Data analyzed by The Finder shows that at least 48 police officers paid the ultimate price of death in the discharge of their constitutional duties to protect lives and property in Ghana from 2013 to date.
According to the OECD, the UK rates as follows in 2005 (only data I have access to), I've included data from the US since you've used them in your post and Germany and France as a comparison with two randomly picked (read: I saw them in the list) European countries: Death from heart disease per 100,000 population (23 listed): 13th 49.3; France 2nd 22.5, Germany 12th 48.3; US 7th 40.3; Japan 1st 18.4; Hungary 23rd 71.7 Death from cancer per 100,000 population (24 listed): 18th 175.6; France 15th 166.2; Germany 11th 161.2; US 10th 159.8; Mexico 1st 96.8; Hungary 24th 242.0 Data from the ONS for 2005 (most recent report I could find) shows: Death from cancer per 100,000 population (19 listed): 8th 216.9; Germany 4th 215.3; Cyprus 1st 149.6; Hungary 19th 330.8 Death from heart disease per 100,000 population (19 listed): 10th 141.5; Germany 8th 150.4; Portugal 1st 71.9; Lithuania 19th 4data I have access to), I've included data from the US since you've used them in your post and Germany and France as a comparison with two randomly picked (read: I saw them in the list) European countries: Death from heart disease per 100,000 population (23 listed): 13th 49.3; France 2nd 22.5, Germany 12th 48.3; US 7th 40.3; Japan 1st 18.4; Hungary 23rd 71.7 Death from cancer per 100,000 population (24 listed): 18th 175.6; France 15th 166.2; Germany 11th 161.2; US 10th 159.8; Mexico 1st 96.8; Hungary 24th 242.0 Data from the ONS for 2005 (most recent report I could find) shows: Death from cancer per 100,000 population (19 listed): 8th 216.9; Germany 4th 215.3; Cyprus 1st 149.6; Hungary 19th 330.8 Death from heart disease per 100,000 population (19 listed): 10th 141.5; Germany 8th 150.4; Portugal 1st 71.9; Lithuania 19th 4data from the US since you've used them in your post and Germany and France as a comparison with two randomly picked (read: I saw them in the list) European countries: Death from heart disease per 100,000 population (23 listed): 13th 49.3; France 2nd 22.5, Germany 12th 48.3; US 7th 40.3; Japan 1st 18.4; Hungary 23rd 71.7 Death from cancer per 100,000 population (24 listed): 18th 175.6; France 15th 166.2; Germany 11th 161.2; US 10th 159.8; Mexico 1st 96.8; Hungary 24th 242.0 Data from the ONS for 2005 (most recent report I could find) shows: Death from cancer per 100,000 population (19 listed): 8th 216.9; Germany 4th 215.3; Cyprus 1st 149.6; Hungary 19th 330.8 Death from heart disease per 100,000 population (19 listed): 10th 141.5; Germany 8th 150.4; Portugal 1st 71.9; Lithuania 19th 4Data from the ONS for 2005 (most recent report I could find) shows: Death from cancer per 100,000 population (19 listed): 8th 216.9; Germany 4th 215.3; Cyprus 1st 149.6; Hungary 19th 330.8 Death from heart disease per 100,000 population (19 listed): 10th 141.5; Germany 8th 150.4; Portugal 1st 71.9; Lithuania 19th 490.6
In 2016, there were 53 heroin - related deaths, down from 66 the previous year, the data show.
According to the state Health Department, Niagara County tallied 22 deaths from opioid overdoses in 2015 - an increase of one from the previous year - and six more deaths were reported in the first half of 2016, which is the most recent data available.
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