Stuckler, D., Meissner, C., Fishback, P., Basu, S., McKee, M.: Banking crises and mortality during the great depression: evidence from US urban populations, 1929–1937. J. Epidemiol. Community Health. 66 , 410–419 (2012)Stuckler, D., Meissner, C., Fishback, P., Basu, S., ...
2.mortality- the ratio of deaths in an area to the population of that area; expressed per 1000 per year death rate,deathrate,fatality rate,mortality rate infant deathrate,infant mortality,infant mortality rate- the death rate during the first year of life ...
016 Banking crises and mortality during the Great Depression: evidence from US urban populations, 1929–1937. Objectives Previous research has suggested that the economic turmoil during the Great Depression led to significant improvements in public health. However,... Stuckler,Meissner,Fishback,......
Was the Great Depression a cause or correlate of significant mortality declines? An epidemiological response to GranadosWas the Great Depression a cause or correlate of significant mortality declines? An epidemiological response to GranadosEconomicsEpidemiology...
Boys accounted for 67% of the patients, and the mean age of patients in the registry was 8.2 years. Girls had a higher crude mortality rate than boys (3.1% vs 2.7%, respectively; P < .05), but after adjustment, no significant difference was found in the odds of mortality between ...
The age adjusted mortality rate for heart dis- eases in the US declined by more than 50% in the second half of the 20th century [51, 52]. This fall was predomi- nantly driven by rapid declines in mortality from ischemic heart disease, as a result of progress in prevention (e.g., ...
Exposures Steps per day and several measures of stepping intensity (ie, peak 1-minute cadence; peak 30-minute cadence; maximum 5-minute cadence; time spent at a stepping rate of ≥40 steps/min, reflecting purposeful steps). Main Outcomes and Measures All-cause mortality. Results Of the 16...
the subsequent ten years, using data from Aceh, Indonesia, collected before and after the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. Across communities, the higher the percentage of individuals killed in the tsunami, the lower the mortality rate for adults over the subsequent decade. However, among older adults ...
During the study period, the age-adjusted rate of fatal poisonings remained relatively stable at around 2.3 per 100,000 (with slight decreasing and increasing trends, between 2000 and 2010 and 2011-2018, respectively) (Additional file 2, Fig. B.1), mainly because the rate of accidental poiso...
In the positive wealth without shock reference group, the crude mortality rate was 30.6 deaths per 1000 person-years (95% CI, 29.1-32.1). By contrast, the crude mortality rates were 64.9 per 1000 person-years (95% CI, 60.4-69.3) for those who experienced a negative wealth shock, and ...