Sentences with phrase «death rates per»

For example, the age - adjusted death rates per 100,000 population dropped between 2003 and 2004 — the latest data available — for the main life - insurance - buying age groups as follows:
Motorcyclists who ride supersports have driver death rates per 10,000 registered motorcycles nearly 4 times higher than rates for motorcyclists who ride all other types of bikes.
Blacks, Hispanic men and people without a high school diploma have higher vehicle death rates per trip.
That is the main reason they have higher death rates per mile traveled than drivers of other ages.
Asthma visits in primary care settings, emergency room visits, and hospitalizations were all stable from 2001 to 2009, and asthma death rates per 1,000 persons with asthma declined from 2001 to 2009.158 To the extent that increased pollen exposures occur, patients and their physicians will face increased challenges in maintaining adequate asthma control.
I also looked at model history and death rate per number of registered vehicles.
Without these improvements, the motor vehicle death rate per registered vehicle would have stopped declining in 1994 and started going up.
Of course, walking has a much higher death rate per mile than autos, which is much higher than public transportation.
The benchmark figure for each five - year age bracket is slightly above the death rate per $ 1,000 at the highest age in the bracket.

Not exact matches

In the District of Columbia, concerns about the high maternal mortality rate — in 2014, it stood at about 40.7 deaths per 100,000 births, according to the analysis by United Health Foundation, substantially exceeding the U.S. rate and those of neighboring Virginia and Maryland — have periodically sparked talk of a review committee, but not enough to push a measure through.
The US ranks 31st in the world in gun deaths per 100,000 people, with a rate of 3.85.
«If hand hygiene compliance rates increased by 8.7 percentage points across the board during a typical work shift, this could potentially eliminate as many as 1.2 million infections per year, save up to $ 25 billion, and prevent up to 70,000 unnecessary deaths in the United States,» reports Knowledge@Wharton.
In the coming decades, as baby - boomers hit old age, the annual death rate will climb from 8.3 per 1,000 people today to 10.2 by 2050 in America, from 10.6 to 13.7 in Italy and from 9.1 to 12.8 in Spain.
Second, firearm deaths in states with higher buyback rates per capita fell proportionately more than in states with lower buyback rates
In the cost - effectiveness analysis (GiveWell estimate of Living Goods cost effectiveness (November 2014)-RRB-, in all Sheets except for «U5MR (Jake's assumptions),» we use 5q0, or the probability of a child dying before his or her 5th birthday expressed in deaths per 1,000 live births assuming constant mortality rates throughout childhood, instead of the under - 5 mortality rate (under 5 deaths per person per year), because the original report on the RCT we received from Living Goods reported outcomes in terms of 5q0.
California, for example, ranks at the top of the list, receiving the only «A» grade for its strong gun laws and relatively low gun death rate — 43rd in the nation at 7.9 deaths per 100,000.
Alaska, which received an «F» grade, had the nation's highest gun death rate — 23 per 100,000.
Horgan and MLAs Carole James (Victoria - Beacon Hill), Rob Fleming (Victoria - Swan Lake) and Selina Robinson (Coquitlam - Maillardville) met with families and advocacy organizations on Vancouver Island, which has suffered the worst per - capita overdose death rate in the province.
The crack epidemic of the mid - to late 1980s was worse, with a death rate reaching almost two per 100,000.
From another perspective, Bangladesh, the world's eighth most populous nation (with.0003 of the earth's land), has reduced its death rate to 17 per thousand (from 50 in 1900); its birth rate remains constant at 48 per 1,000.
Since the United States is a rich, powerful, humanitarian country, it might seem that the rate of 20 deaths per 1,000 live births were a threshold that could not be lowered.
@BIll Collins In 2003, the death rate due to firearms in the US was 10.4 per 100,000 people.
The rate is 37 deaths per 1000 live births, down from 130 in 1980 (source: http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.DYN.IMRT.IN).
My country has over the last five years seen c - section rate rise steadily to over 30 %, and maternal mortality rate drop significantly from 21 to 14 deaths per 100 000 births.
However in the US the figure is 21 maternal deaths per 100,000 births — more than 3 times the rate in the Netherlands.
Neonatal death rate was 2.8 per 1000 and perinatal death rate was 8.7 per 1000.
I'm not sure what the home birth rate is in the Netherlands but the Maternal Mortality rate for the Netherlands is 6 maternal deaths per 100,000 births.
For example, if we look at deaths per 1000 live births, Netherlands has a much lower rate than the U.S..
There are only about 125,000 babies born each year in Belgium, according to Wikipedia, and maternal death rates in the first world are measured in deaths per hundred thousand.
«The Maternal Mortality Rate for Estonia is 2 deaths per 100,000 births — that seems like the safest place to give birth»
The Finnish boxes are part of a wider scheme that helped reduce the number of infants deaths from 10 percent to 0.2 per cent — one of the lowest rates in the world.
Analyzing medical death rate data over an eight - year period, John Hopkins patient safety experts have calculated that more than 250,000 deaths per year are due to medical error in the United States.
Based on those charts you could hypothesize that a c - section rate between 22 - 30 % is the «sweet spot» as it correlates with the lowest rates of death per 1000 live births.
And the maternal death rate is 16 per 100,000 pregnancies.
This was a rate of 2.0 deaths per 1000 intended home births.
When the expected deaths of babies with fetal anomalies were excluded, the rate was 1.7 per 1000 births.
During 2010, a total of 1418 children under 10 died in transportation accidents, for a death rate of roughly 2.2 per 100,000 per year, or 22 per 100,000 total by age 10.
18 deaths in 3 years, that's 6 per year and based on the fact that homebirth rates have been rising in the past 3 years and nearly 30 % of women are opting for homebirth I'd say those stats are pretty good and far better than your risks when walking through the doors of any hospital.
Per the World Health Organization, «a modest increase in breastfeeding rates could prevent up to 10 % of all deaths of children under five: Breastfeeding plays an essential and sometimes underestimated role in the treatment and prevention of childhood illness.»
However, comparatively few births were attended by unregistered practitioners alone (n = 737) and these births did not have a high death rate (2.7 per 1000).
The US has approx 10 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births — which is itself too high — but there are countries where the rate is over 1000 per 100,000 live births.
This effort is credited with radically decreasing the country's infant mortality rate from 65 deaths for each 1,000 children born in 1938 to 3 deaths per 1,000 births in 2013.
The death rate for infants weighing 2500 g in 1985 - 8 was 5.7 per 1000 in home births compared with 3.6 per 1000 nationally (relative risk 1.6; 95 % confidence interval 1.1 to 2.4).
Excluding the five late neonatal deaths gives a perinatal death rate of 6.4 per 1000 according to criteria of the World Health Organisation.
Among the 7002 home births studied, there were 50 deaths (31 fetal and 19 neonatal)(table 1) giving a perinatal death rate of 7.1 per 1000 according to the Australian definition.
According to http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/databriefs/db16.htm the US rate is about 6 deaths per thousand.
During 1985 - 90 there were just over 1.5 million births in Australia, giving a death rate (including late neonatal deaths) of 10.8 per 1000 compared with 7.1 per 1000 in planned home births (table 4).
The perinatal death rate in infants weighing more than 2500 g was higher than the national average (5.7 versus 3.6 per 1000: relative risk 1.6; 1.1 to 2.4) as were intrapartum deaths not due to malformations or immaturity (2.7 versus 0.9 per 1000: 3.0; 1.9 to 4.8).
The early neonatal death rate in our home birth sample was 0.41 per 1000, which is statistically congruent with rates reported by de Jonge et al [10] and the Birthplace in England Collaborative Group.
As for neonatal death rates, yes, the USA's overall neonatal mortality rate is 4 per 1000, 3.35 if you look only at white women.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z