mortality risk - definitie. Wat is mortality risk
Diclib.com
Woordenboek ChatGPT
Voer een woord of zin in in een taal naar keuze 👆
Taal:

Vertaling en analyse van woorden door kunstmatige intelligentie ChatGPT

Op deze pagina kunt u een gedetailleerde analyse krijgen van een woord of zin, geproduceerd met behulp van de beste kunstmatige intelligentietechnologie tot nu toe:

  • hoe het woord wordt gebruikt
  • gebruiksfrequentie
  • het wordt vaker gebruikt in mondelinge of schriftelijke toespraken
  • opties voor woordvertaling
  • Gebruiksvoorbeelden (meerdere zinnen met vertaling)
  • etymologie

Wat (wie) is mortality risk - definitie

Mortality, bill of; Bills of Mortality; Old Bills of Mortality; Old bills of mortality; Metropolitan Bills of Mortality; Metropolitan bills of mortality; Tables of mortality; Bill of mortality; London Bill of Mortality
  • Annual return for 1665
  • doi-access=free }}</ref>

Risk of mortality         
MEDICAL CLASSIFICATION TO ESTIMATE THE LIKELIHOOD OF INHOSPITAL DEATH FOR A PATIENT
Risk of Mortality
The risk of mortality (ROM) provides a medical classification to estimate the likelihood of inhospital death for a patient. The ROM classes are minor, moderate, major, and extreme.
death rate         
  • date=January 2020}}
MEASURE OF THE NUMBER OF DEATHS IN A POPULATION FROM A GIVEN CAUSE, SCALED BY POPULATION, IN A SET PERIOD OF TIME
Death rate; Crude death rate; Death rates; Death Rate; Deathrate; Rate of death; Mortality rates; Rate of mortality; Mortality (demography); Demography, mortality; Crude mortality rate; All-cause mortality; Overall mortality
¦ noun the number of deaths per one thousand people per year.
Mortality rate         
  • date=January 2020}}
MEASURE OF THE NUMBER OF DEATHS IN A POPULATION FROM A GIVEN CAUSE, SCALED BY POPULATION, IN A SET PERIOD OF TIME
Death rate; Crude death rate; Death rates; Death Rate; Deathrate; Rate of death; Mortality rates; Rate of mortality; Mortality (demography); Demography, mortality; Crude mortality rate; All-cause mortality; Overall mortality
Mortality rate, or death rate, is a measure of the number of deaths (in general, or due to a specific cause) in a particular population, scaled to the size of that population, per unit of time. Mortality rate is typically expressed in units of deaths per 1,000 individuals per year; thus, a mortality rate of 9.

Wikipedia

Bills of mortality

Bills of mortality were the weekly mortality statistics in London, designed to monitor burials from 1592 to 1595 and then continuously from 1603. The responsibility to produce the statistics was chartered in 1611 to the Worshipful Company of Parish Clerks. The bills covered an area that started to expand as London grew from the City of London, before reaching its maximum extent in 1636. New parishes were then only added where ancient parishes within the area were divided. Factors such as the use of suburban cemeteries outside the area, the exemption of extra-parochial places within the area, the wider growth of the metropolis, and that they recorded burials rather than deaths, rendered their data incomplete. Production of the bills went into decline from 1819 as parishes ceased to provide returns, with the last surviving weekly bill dating from 1858. They were superseded by the weekly returns of the Registrar General from 1840, taking in further parishes until 1847. This area became the district of the Metropolitan Board of Works in 1855, the County of London in 1889 and Inner London in 1965.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor mortality risk
1. Even smoking one to seven bidis a day raised the mortality risk by a third, Jha said.
2. While black inner–city men have a mortality risk similar to that of West Africans, that is true only once they reach their forties.
3. These findings indicate that wine preference in young adulthood is related to educational, health and lifestyle characteristics that may help to explain the association between light–moderate wine consumption and morbidity, and mortality risk in later adulthood, conclude Dr Mallie Paschall and Dr Robert Lipton, from the Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation Prevention Research Centre in Berkeley.
4. Sweden heads the list, with Niger last. (10 worst and best) The "Mothers‘ Index" in the report ranks 125 nations according to 10 gauges of well–being –– six for mothers and four for children –– including objective measures such as lifetime mortality risk for mothers and infant mortality rate and subjective measures such as the political status of women.
5. "It‘s not a cookie–cutter, one–size–fits–all situation, where excess weight just increases your mortality risk for any and all causes of death." The study, published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association, was greeted with sharply mixed reactions.