«New method reveals real -
time death risk of Korean MERS outbreak.»
While there have been attempts to estimate real -
time death risks during epidemics, such statistical models require data from large numbers of patients in the order of thousands and therefore could not be applied to the 2015 MERS epidemic in the Republic of Korea with small patient numbers.
Not exact matches
Another study reported by The New York
Times in 2008 found that men who did not take a vacation at least once a year had a «21 percent higher
risk of
death from all causes and were 32 percent more likely to die of a heart attack».
It found that the more
time they spent sitting, the greater their
risk of
death from heart disease — regardless of age, sex, smoking status, alcohol consumption and how much the subjects exercised.
Overall, participants who maintained healthy eating patterns throughout the study period lowered their
risk of
death between 9 - 14 %, with even those who started out with unhealthy eating patterns seeing a reduced
risk the more healthy food they added over
time.
Baldet, who has spent a lot of her
time in tech working with at -
risk populations, stresses how having someone at the design table who represents the people who are going to use the technology can sometimes even be a matter of life or
death.
If you haven't taken the
time to draft a living will or outline exactly how you want your retirement funds — and any other financial assets you own — distributed upon your
death, there is a
risk that your significant other may not see your hard - earned dollars.
For a long
time he thought you would have to
risk death to accomplish his dream, but now he's decided he doesn't want you to.
-
Risk to a woman's health of childbirth (during first trimester, abortions have a death rate that is more than five times lower than the risk of death to mothers from childbir
Risk to a woman's health of childbirth (during first trimester, abortions have a
death rate that is more than five
times lower than the
risk of death to mothers from childbir
risk of
death to mothers from childbirth.)
Sad news from the halls of research today, in which a study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition says that eating fried potatoes two or more
times a week can double your
risk of early
death.
The health
risks of the chemical contraceptives have been known for a very long
time and include weight gain, migraines, depression, and even
death from blood clots.
The fact that your entire life plan furnishes positive proof that you have unreservedly
risked everything you are and have on the adventure of survival after
death in the pursuit of the hope of finding the God of eternity, whose presence you have foretasted in
time.
In developing countries, education and contraceptives can help the 120 million women of childbearing age who want safe, healthy
timing and spacing of their pregnancies — and reduce the
risk of maternal and infant
death.
Someone would have broken ranks in
time especially at the
risk of
death.
Death by choking on vomit or suffocation by blankets are a real thing that happens all the
time, and why
risk it?
(As anyone who has been visiting MomsTEAM's Concussion Safety Center for the past twelve years knows, science and technology have yet to come up with a way to prevent concussions; the most we can realistically hope to do at this point is a better job of identifying concussions when they occur and managing them in such a way as to keep the recovery
time to a minimum and to keep kids from returning before their brains have fully healed so as to minimize the
risk of serious, long - term effects, or even, in rare cases,
death).
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends using pacifiers at nap
time and bedtime, based on evidence that using a pacifier may reduce the
risk of sudden infant
death syndrome (SIDS).
In Missouri, the
risk of intrapartum
death at homebirth is nearly 20
times higher than hospital birth.
Homebirth increases the
risk of perinatal
death and brain damage even though the incidence of pitocin augmentation was 5
times higher in the hospital group.
Infants of women who were referred to secondary care during labour had a 3.66
times higher
risk of delivery related perinatal
death than did infants of women who started labour in secondary care (relative
risk 3.66, 1.58 to 8.46)...
This is the 4th confirmed homebirth
death in NC this year for a rate that is a whopping TEN
times higher than the rate of
death for comparable
risk hospital birth.
Homebirth increases the
risk of perinatal
death and brain damage even though the incidence of epidural use was 5
times higher in the hospital group.
Women run 5 to 7
times the
risk of
death with cesarean section compared with vaginal birth.14, 29 Complications during and after the surgery include surgical injury to the bladder, uterus and blood vessels (2 per 100), 30 hemorrhage (1 to 6 women per 100 require a blood transfusion), 30 anesthesia accidents, blood clots in the legs (6 to 20 per 1000), 30 pulmonary embolism (1 to 2 per 1000), 30 paralyzed bowel (10 to 20 per 100 mild cases, 1 in 100 severe), 30 and infection (up to 50
times morecommon).1 One in ten women report difficulties with normal activities two months after the birth, 23 and one in four report pain at the incision site as a major problem.9 One in fourteen still report incisional pain six months or more after delivery.9 Twice as many women require rehospitalization as women having normal vaginal birth.18 Especially with unplanned cesarean section, women are more likely to experience negative emotions, including lower self - esteem, a sense of failure, loss of control, and disappointment.
The perinatal (around the
time of birth)
death rate of babies born in nonhospital settings is much higher than for babies born in a hospital, even though their mothers are supposedly lower -
risk.
In Oregon, there have been at least 19 newborn
deaths reported to the state over the past decade for a
death rate more than 4
times higher than low
risk hospital birth.
Obviously, that is 9
times higher than the hospital
death rate for low
risk women.
Babies die all the
time at homebirth, and the biggest
risk factors lead to the greatest number of
deaths.
Your
risk of miscarriage during this
time is higher, and undercooked or unpasteurized food can sometimes cause premature labor or infant
death.
When this 20 %
risk of
death is compared to the 0.02 % rate of cord prolapse during labor at homebirth that might have a better outcome if it happened in hospital, this means that a low
risk woman has a 1000
times higher chance of having a life threatening complication either to her life or her fetus / newborns life at planned hospital birth, than if she plans to have an attended homebirth with a well - trained practitioner.
It seems that the rates reported in this database for low -
risk pregnancies (excluding malpresentation and other factors) are all as good as or better in every category other than intrapartum
death rate of babies, which I am having a hard
time finding in the other literature on hospital births in the U.S. for low -
risk, white women.
All the existing scientific evidence, as well as state and national statistics shows that American homebirth has an increased
risk of
death of at least 3 - 9
times higher than comparable
risk hospital birth.
The increase in
risk remained high even when overlying
deaths were discounted (32
times higher) or the estimate of rates of bedsharing among living infants doubled (20
times higher).
To reduce the
risk of Sudden Baby
Death Syndrome (SIDS), your baby should be placed on her back when it's
time to sleep.
In fact, the latest statistics from the CDC show that planned homebirth in 2007 with a homebirth midwife (often called a certified professional midwife, CPM, or licensed midwife, LM) had a newborn
death rate more than 7
TIMES higher than low
risk hospital birth.
After breastfeeding has been firmly established, usually at 3 to 4 weeks of age, the AAP suggests offering a pacifier to infants at routine sleep and nap
times to help reduce the
risk for SIDS and other sleep - related infant
deaths.
I would argue that it should be made clear to women that, while the
risk of a homebirth is small, the
risk of perinatal
death is several
times that of a hospital.
Using a pacifier at sleep
times can help reduce
risk of sudden infant
death syndrome, notes HealthyChildren.org, a website of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
The date clearly is comparable to birth center and hospital data, and there is at least double to 5.5
times the
risk of
death.
However, this solution is risky: According to the American SIDS Institute, babies who sleep on their tummy have almost 13
times the
risk of
death as babies who sleep on their back.
Research shows that pacifier use during sleep
time may reduce the
risk of sudden infant
death syndrome, or SIDS, among babies who are 6 months or younger.
And it carries with it a
risk of maternal
death that is five to seven
times greater than a normal birth.
There's another benefit to using a pacifier: Some studies have shown that babies who use pacifiers at bedtime and nap
time have a lower
risk of SIDS (sudden infant
death syndrome).
Increases in maternal
deaths have been attributed to Cesareans, which increase the
risk of infection and delay recovery
times by several weeks.
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.
By the late 1970s, a woman arriving on the labor and delivery floor of a U.S. tertiary care hospital with a nonmalformed, living, singleton fetus at term had a
risk of intrapartum fetal
death of 1 in 1000.1 At that
time the U.S. cesarean delivery rate was approaching 15 %.2 Since then, the rate of cesarean sections has more than doubled, 3 but the intrapartum fetal
death rate in major U.S. centers remains unchanged.
Doctors there reported that babies born at home to midwives have four
times the
risk of neonatal
deaths than those delivered in the hospital by midwives.
Maternal mortality is increasingly high, Nigeria has one of the poorest maternal and child health indices in the world with maternal 800-3000
deaths per 100,000 live births, life
time risk of dying from pregnancy related complications of 1:8 compared to 1:10 in developing countries (Nigeria Demographic Health Survey 2004).
Homeless men who played soccer a few
times a week had improved cardiovascular health and a lower
risk of
death.
Compared to population - based peers, youth who have gone to an emergency department to hospital with suicide - related behaviors had three to four
times higher
risk of
death.
Recently, Manson and colleagues published a long - term study of the
risk of
death in women in the two WHI hormone therapy trials — combined therapy and estrogen alone — from the
time of trial enrollment in the mid-1990s until the end of 2014.