When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mortality rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortality_rate

    The crude death rate is defined as "the mortality rate from all causes of death for a population," calculated as the "total number of deaths during a given time interval" divided by the "mid-interval population", per 1,000 or 100,000; for instance, the population of the United States was around 290,810,000 in 2003, and in that year, approximately 2,419,900 deaths occurred in total, giving a ...

  3. Mortality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortality

    Mortality may refer to: Fish mortality , a parameter used in fisheries population dynamics to account for the loss of fish in a fish stock through death Mortality (book) , a 2012 collection of essays by Anglo-American writer Christopher Hitchens

  4. Gompertz–Makeham law of mortality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gompertz–Makeham_law_of...

    The Gompertz–Makeham law of mortality describes the age dynamics of human mortality rather accurately in the age window from about 30 to 80 years of age. At more advanced ages, some studies have found that death rates increase more slowly – a phenomenon known as the late-life mortality deceleration [2] – but more recent studies disagree. [4]

  5. Case fatality rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Case_fatality_rate

    The mortality rate – often confused with the CFR – is a measure of the relative number of deaths (either in general, or due to a specific cause) within the entire population per unit of time. [2] A CFR, in contrast, is the number of deaths among the number of diagnosed cases only, regardless of time or total population. [3]

  6. Life table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_table

    The Pattern Method: Let the pattern of mortality continue until the rate approaches or hits 1.000 and set that as the ultimate age. The Less-Than-One Method: This is a variation on the Forced Method. The ultimate mortality rate is set equal to the expected mortality at a selected ultimate age, rather 1.000 as in the Forced Method.

  7. Lizzy McAlpine Explains How Mortality and the Concept of Time ...

    www.aol.com/lizzy-mcalpine-explains-mortality...

    Lizzy McAlpine is an admitted overthinker, particularly when it comes to the concept of time and our inability to control it.“I spiral about that pretty much every night,” says the 24-year-old ...

  8. Epidemiological transition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemiological_transition

    Using Global Burden of Disease data from 1990, they disintegrate the transition across three cause groups: communicable diseases, non-communicable diseases and injuries, seeking to explain the variation in all-cause mortality as a function of cause-specific mortality in 58 countries from 1950 to 1998.

  9. A new definition of obesity goes beyond BMI. What this could ...

    www.aol.com/news/could-definition-obesity-doctor...

    A commission proposed a new definition of obesity focused on how excess fat affects the body, rather than assessing body mass index, that could change clinical care. A new definition of obesity ...