Sentences with phrase «higher mortality rates for»

There probably would be higher mortality rates for persons with plaque buildup in their arteries who do a lot of exercise over those who do more moderate.
Sadly, the results are as you'd expect, with more complications during birth and higher mortality rates for both mom and baby.
For lower socioeconomic women and often black women, yes, a marriageable man is one who has a job, but drug use and trafficking, under - or unemployment, the high rates of men in jail and the higher mortality rates for black men in their community put them at marital disadvantage — there are fewer men in their dating pool (And as I addressed previously, strong black women are often seen as being a detriment to black men's masculinity.)
Results demonstrated that the 0.20 - m3 · m - 3 threshold was insufficient for root establishment, leading to high mortality rates for both cultivars.
The students are employing that technology — which includes CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats) systems, DNA microarrays, real - time polymerase chain reactions, RNA sequencing and western blotting — to study acute myeloid leukemia (AML), which affects both children and adults and comes with a high mortality rate for older patients.
I read some where that hospital births had a higher mortality rate for mothers and infants than home births.
There was a high mortality rate for feral kittens, but outdoor cats who reached adulthood had an excellent chance for many years of healthy life.
The end result is that community cats are by far the greatest source of kitten births and of cat admissions to animal shelters, even when the higher mortality rate for community kittens is factored in.
The fragile population experiences a high mortality rate for both adult and juvenile birds, the Center for Biological Diversity reports, and is threatened in several ways — most notably by the efforts of nearby Prescott, Arizona, to remove water from the Upper Verde River.

Not exact matches

Women who reported sitting longer than six hours a day had a 40 % higher mortality rate than those who sat for fewer than three hours, whereas men had a 20 % higher death rate.
For the past year, ProPublica and NPR have been examining why the U.S. has the highest rate of maternal mortality in the industrialized world.
According to an analysis of fatal and nonfatal childhood firearm injuries compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, black children face the highest rates of firearm mortality, a difference largely driven by black youth being more likely to face a firearm homicide.
According to a 2017 analysis of fatal and nonfatal childhood firearm injuries compiled by researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, black children face the highest rates of firearm mortality — a difference largely driven by black youth being more likely to be shooting victims than children from other racial groups.
Perinatal mortality rates for hospital births of low risk women are similar to outcomes of planned homebirth in general, but the maternal morbidity at planned hospital births is much higher.
With a mortality rate of almost 5x higher than hospital birth, this is not that far off the 6 - 8 times higher we saw for the Oregon data collection, even though the Oregon group almost surely had significantly fewer criteria for risking mothers out (no criteria in some places, I'm sure) as well as lower qualifications for the midwives as CPMs and DEMs.
For a nation that has so many hospital births tell me why we fall so high in infant mortality rate?
I live in Belgium where we have extensive medical care for mothers in comparison with other EU countries and yet in comparison with other EU countries, we have a higher rate of maternal mortality.
That's TEN TIMES HIGHER than the national neonatal mortality rate for low risk hospital birth with a CNM.
In fact, a report published last month — Differences Between Rural and Urban Areas in Mortality Rates for the Leading Causes of Infant Death: United States, 2013 — 2015 — which describes the mortality rates for the five leading causes of infant, neonatal, and postneonatal death in the United States across rural, small and medium urban, and large urban counties, showed that infant, neonatal, and postneonatal mortality rates were higher in rural counties than in large urban Mortality Rates for the Leading Causes of Infant Death: United States, 2013 — 2015 — which describes the mortality rates for the five leading causes of infant, neonatal, and postneonatal death in the United States across rural, small and medium urban, and large urban counties, showed that infant, neonatal, and postneonatal mortality rates were higher in rural counties than in large urban counRates for the Leading Causes of Infant Death: United States, 2013 — 2015 — which describes the mortality rates for the five leading causes of infant, neonatal, and postneonatal death in the United States across rural, small and medium urban, and large urban counties, showed that infant, neonatal, and postneonatal mortality rates were higher in rural counties than in large urban mortality rates for the five leading causes of infant, neonatal, and postneonatal death in the United States across rural, small and medium urban, and large urban counties, showed that infant, neonatal, and postneonatal mortality rates were higher in rural counties than in large urban counrates for the five leading causes of infant, neonatal, and postneonatal death in the United States across rural, small and medium urban, and large urban counties, showed that infant, neonatal, and postneonatal mortality rates were higher in rural counties than in large urban mortality rates were higher in rural counties than in large urban counrates were higher in rural counties than in large urban counties.
Her current research project, again in Malawi, explores explanations for maternal death in a context in which mortality rates are very high while the uncertainties surrounding any given death are substantial.
Perinatal mortality rates were similar for planned home and hospital births, but neonatal mortality rates were significantly higher with planned home births.
Dutch women go to other countries to give birth rather than settle for the midwife led care (and higher perinatal mortality rate) that is a feature of the Netherlands.
What is the reason for the high and rising rate of maternal mortality in California?
Yes, they are different, and yes, the mortality rate for homebirths is higher, but the population size is so small that the statistic is highly sensitive to noise in the data.
Our current maternity care system's disconnected and medical treatment of birth is what's causing the need for more medical and surgical intervention and emergency situations in the first place; it leads into a cascade of further interventions and more serious problems like the high rates of maternal and newborn morbidity and mortality that plague the United States.
Some also argue that it's a higher risk for mom and baby, but in fact, maternal mortality rates are 3 - 4 times LOWER in moms who VBAC.
However, higher rates of a composite outcome of perinatal morbidity and mortality were seen for nulliparous women having homebirths (adjusted odds ratio 1.75; 95 % CI, 1.07 — 2.86), with no differences for multiparous women.
Researchers reported high overall perinatal mortality in a study of home birth in Australia, 35 qualifying that low risk home births in Australia had good outcomes but that high risk births gave rise to a high rate of avoidable death at home.36 Two prospective studies in North America found positive outcomes for home birth, 23 24 but the studies were not of sufficient size to provide relatively stable perinatal death rates.
c - sec births however often have a higher rate of mortality or infection for either the mother or the infant.
Indeed, the average C - section rate for countries with low maternal and neonatal mortality is 22 %, although rates as high as 32 % or higher are consistent with low rates of maternal and neonatal mortality.
The mortality rate at home is higher, for the mother and especially the baby.
Note that the total mortality rate for births planned to be attended by direct - entry midwives is 6 - 8 times higher than the rate for births planned to be attended in hospitals.
Additionally, the numbers usually quoted for in hospital mortality rates typically include high risk births.
The Baby Box Company is working with hospitals, community health organizations, and the non-profit Babies Need Boxes Ohio to give away cardboard box beds, for every newborn in the state this year, in an effort to reduce high infant - mortality rates.
The U.S. has considered many factors, such as advanced maternal age, more reproductive technology, and higher rates of premature births for its high mortality rate, but the rate is simply much too high.
The U.S., unfortunately, continues to have a shockingly high rate of infant mortality for a highly - developed country with advanced technology.
The World Alliance for Breastfeeding Action's Web site states that breast - feeding within the first hour of birth «is the first and most vital step» toward reducing the nation's neonatal mortality rate — one of the highest in the industrialized world.
The overall mortality rate for all - risk term pregnancies across the board ought to be significantly higher than the mortality rate for the «low - risk» women who decide on nonhospital birth.
Infant mortality rates are 1.8 times higher for infants of unmarried mothers than for married mothers.
The article lost me when they claimed that interventions in hospitals are responsible for high maternal mortality rate in the US.
• Assumptions about different cultural groups and how they impact breastfeeding support • Shoshone and Arapaho tribal breastfeeding traditions shared through oral folklore • Barriers to decreasing health disparities in infant mortality for African Americans • Effects of inflammation and trauma on health disparities that result in higher rates of infant mortality among minority populations • Barriers to breastfeeding experienced by Black mothers and how lactation consultants can support them more effectively • Social support and breastfeeding self - efficacy among Black mothers • Decreasing pregnancy, birth, and lactation health disparities in the urban core • Positive changes in breastfeeding rates within the African American community • Grassroots breastfeeding organizations serving African American mothers
the Netherlands has, and has had for some years, one of the HIGHEST perinatal mortality rate in Western Europe.
Arkansas has the worst infant mortality rate and the highest cesarean section rate in the U.S. Arkansas statistics show the fetal mortality rate for physicians as 8.3 / 1000, but for licensed midwives as only 4.0 / 1000.
The perinatal mortality rate for low risk women cared for by midwives is higher than the perinatal mortality rate for high risk women care for by obstetricians!
Also, there are certain conditions for which the home birth mortality rate was significantly higher than the average.
To refute this obvious mistruth, she is pointing out what the science actually says — that the perinatal mortality rate for low risk women cared for by midwives, whether at home or at hospital, is higher than the perinatal mortality rate for high risk women cared for by obstetricians in the hospital.
On the other hand, for a first time mother with no complications at the start of labor, the Birthplace Study found a nearly 3 x greater risk of intrapartum / neonatal loss, and the data from the Netherlands suggests that although the rates aren't high enough to affect the overall perinatal mortality rate, there are greater risks out of hospital if a complication does occur.
Yes, a big of the reason for our higher maternal mortality rate is general health of the population, which is associated with some other reasons: poverty and lack of access to care.
For those who wish to read real statistics and not just Dr Tuteur's cherry picking to fit her extreme bias, here is the link to the OECD report that shows that France has a higher perinatal mortality rate then the Netherlands.
We're currently ranked what like what, # 34 in the world for infant mortality and you want to compare the 1 % to the 99 % and then say that the rate is 450 % higher?!
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