Title: Mortality
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3Mortality Rates
- LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- TO DEFINE THE DIFFERENT MEASUREMENTS OF MORTALITY
- TO IDENTIFY THE DIFFERENT GLOBAL MORTALITY TRENDS
4Measuring Mortality
- Crude Death Rate The average annual number of
deaths during a year per 1,000 population.
5Problems with CDR
- The problem with using CDR (Crude Death Rates) is
it affected by the age structure of the country. - If all other things are equal CDR goes up as the
average age of the population goes up.
6Measuring Mortality
- Life Expectancy The average number of years to be
lived by a group of people born in the same year,
if mortality at each age remains constant in the
future.
7Issues with Life Expectancy
- It is an AVERAGE.
- You can split the total population into different
groups (cohorts) to compare some of these
differences within a population. - Rich v poor, urban v rural, male v female, ethnic
groups, age groups. - Life expectancy figures can be affected by high
IMR. If you survive infancy you could live much
longer than the life expectancy figures suggest.
8Measuring Mortality
- Age Sex Specific Death Rate
- The death rate for a particular age group within
the population (male/female) - Most common
- INFANT MORTALITY (First year of life)
- CHILD MORTALITY (First 5 years)
9Infant Mortality
- Many deaths in this age group are preventable and
therefore IMR decreases dramatically as medical
care is improved. - For this reason IMR is seen as an accurate
indicator of development.
10Infant Mortality
- Status of women and income
- Educational level of mother
- Age of mother
- Also birth interval
11Mortality trends
- MEDCs main decrease in late industrial
revolution. - In 1870 life expectancy Manchester - 29 years
Sheffield 33 years
12Mortality trends
- LEDCs main decreases in second half of twentieth
century
13Immunisation Campaigns
14DDT Spraying-Malaria
15Mortality trends
16Mortality Trends
- HIV Aids has had a huge impact on populations.
17Mortality Trends
- SARS, Asian Bird Flu, Swine Flu, other future
pandemics?
18malaria remains the biggest cause of death for
children under five in Africa. Jong-Wook Lee,
2006
CHOLERA
19Cholera
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26A high incidence of infectious diseases such as
HIV/Aids, cholera, malaria and typhoid will
result in low life expectancy and high infant and
child mortality rates.
Poor sanitation and water supply.
Explaining life expectancy patterns
Poor health care systems mean that societies are
not in a position to combat and fight against
diseases that are often manageable and
preventable.
High levels of malnutrition contribute
significantly and make it difficult for people to
fight disease.
27Epidemiological Transition Model
LEDC ____________________________________
MEDC Infectious diseases ____________
Degenerative diseases
Cholera, TB, Aids, Diarrhoea, Malaria, Typhoid
Cancer, Heart disease