共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
MORIYAMA IM 《Public Health Reports》1954,69(10):963-969
2.
LOGAN WP 《Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine》1959,52(6):463-468
3.
Mohapatra B Warrell DA Suraweera W Bhatia P Dhingra N Jotkar RM Rodriguez PS Mishra K Whitaker R Jha P;Million Death Study Collaborators 《PLoS neglected tropical diseases》2011,5(4):e1018
Background
India has long been thought to have more snakebites than any other country. However, inadequate hospital-based reporting has resulted in estimates of total annual snakebite mortality ranging widely from about 1,300 to 50,000. We calculated direct estimates of snakebite mortality from a national mortality survey.Methods and Findings
We conducted a nationally representative study of 123,000 deaths from 6,671 randomly selected areas in 2001–03. Full-time, non-medical field workers interviewed living respondents about all deaths. The underlying causes were independently coded by two of 130 trained physicians. Discrepancies were resolved by anonymous reconciliation or, failing that, by adjudication.A total of 562 deaths (0.47% of total deaths) were assigned to snakebites. Snakebite deaths occurred mostly in rural areas (97%), were more common in males (59%) than females (41%), and peaked at ages 15–29 years (25%) and during the monsoon months of June to September. This proportion represents about 45,900 annual snakebite deaths nationally (99% CI 40,900 to 50,900) or an annual age-standardised rate of 4.1/100,000 (99% CI 3.6–4.5), with higher rates in rural areas (5.4/100,000; 99% CI 4.8–6.0), and with the highest state rate in Andhra Pradesh (6.2). Annual snakebite deaths were greatest in the states of Uttar Pradesh (8,700), Andhra Pradesh (5,200), and Bihar (4,500).Conclusions
Snakebite remains an underestimated cause of accidental death in modern India. Because a large proportion of global totals of snakebites arise from India, global snakebite totals might also be underestimated. Community education, appropriate training of medical staff and better distribution of antivenom, especially to the 13 states with the highest prevalence, could reduce snakebite deaths in India. 相似文献4.
5.
6.
V Beral 《BMJ (Clinical research ed.)》1979,2(6191):632-634
The transfer from traditional to modern methods of contraception in recent decades has been accompanied by a transfer of deaths from complications of pregnancy to deaths from complications of the modern contraceptive methods. In 1975, for example, it is estimated that there were more deaths at ages 25-44 years in England and Wales from adverse effects of oral contraceptive use than from all complications of pregnancy, delivery, and the puerperium combined. Thus maternal mortality is no longer an adequate indicator of the deaths associated with reproduction in the community. An alternative measure, the reproductive mortality rate should be used, which includes deaths from complications of contraceptive use as well as those from complications of pregnancy or abortion. The reproductive mortality rate in England and Wales seems to have declined continuously since 1950 for women aged 25-34. But after 1960 it increased for women aged 35-44, because of the higher mortality associated with oral contraceptive use in this age group. 相似文献
7.
8.
9.
10.
The European System for Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation (EuroSCORE) and its American counterpart, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) score, are currently the most used risk scores to predict operative mortality of adult cardiac surgery 相似文献
11.
George Rachiotis Spyros Drivas Konstantinos Kostikas Vasilios Makropoulos Christos Hadjichristodoulou 《BMC pulmonary medicine》2012,12(1):1-5
Background
The evidence regarding the association between lung cancer and occupational exposure to cement is controversial. This study investigated causes of deaths from cancer of respiratory tract among cement workers.Methods
The deaths of the Greek Cement Workers Compensation Scheme were analyzed covering the period 1969-1998. All respiratory, lung, laryngeal and urinary bladder cancer proportionate mortality were calculated for cement production, maintenance, and office workers in the cement industry. Mortality from urinary bladder cancer was used as an indirect indicator of the confounding effect of smoking.Results
Mortality from all respiratory cancer was significantly increased in cement production workers (PMR?=?1.91; 95% CI 1.54 to 2.33). The proportionate mortality from lung cancer was significantly elevated (PMR?=?2.05; 95% CI 1.65 to 2.52). A statistically significant increase in proportionate mortality due to respiratory (PMR?=?1.7; 95% CI 1.2 to 2.34). and lung cancer (PMR?=?1.67;95% CI?=?1.15-2.34) among maintenance workers has been observed. The PMR among the three groups of workers (production, maintenance, office) did differ significantly for lung cancer (p?=?0.001), while the PMR for urinary bladder cancer found to be similar among the three groups of cement workers.Conclusion
Cement production, and maintenance workers presented increased lung and respiratory cancer proportionate mortality, and this finding probably cannot be explained by the confounding effect of smoking alone. Further research including use of prospective cohort studies is needed in order to establish a causal association between occupational exposure to cement and risk of lung cancer. 相似文献12.
Hybridity effect on mortality 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
13.
《Biodemography and social biology》2013,59(3):232-234
Abstract Several techniques for preselecting the sex of offspring are available now or will be in the near future. Although hundreds of studies indicate that sons are desired by the overwhelming proportion of persons asked, few studies ask whether preselecting of sex of offspring ought to be made available generally, as the technologies become perfected. In northern California, 2,138 respondents indicated widespread acceptance of ongoing biomedical research to perfect preselection methods and of making these procedures available to potential parents. Almost half agreed that they might want to use such techniques. Variation in levels of agreement were assessed by sex, race, marital status, child‐parity, religious affiliation and attendance, level of education, class, and general attitudes toward medical and scientific leaders. The implications of the general acceptability of sex selection go far beyond the freedom of parental choice—to such matters as socialization patterns of first son, second daughter ordering, sex role inflexibilities, sex ratio imbalances, and also include possibilities for curtailing rapid population growth. 相似文献
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.