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Search Results for Standardize Mortality Ratio
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in “Outside the Skin”: The Persistence of Black–White Disparities in U.S. Early-Life Mortality
> Demography
Published: 01 December 2022
Fig. 1 All-cause age-standardized mortality rates (panel a) and ratios (panel b), ages 15–24, United States, 1990–2016. Data are from National Vital Statistics System mortality files and Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Result Program population counts. Data represent three-year moving
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Journal Article
Standardized comparisons in population research
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Demography (1964) 1 (1): 296–315.
Published: 01 March 1964
.... The mortality index computed by this method is known as the Standardized Mortality Ratio. This index is also equivalent to the so-called indirect method of standardiza- tion, which was discussed earlier in this paper, and to Westergaard's "method of expected cases." Aggregative index, average population...
Journal Article
The health of the clergy: A review of demographic literature
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Demography (1969) 6 (1): 27–43.
Published: 01 February 1969
... 12 2010 © Population Association of America 1969 1969 Standardize Mortality Ratio Registrar General Catholic Priest Demographic Literature Metropolitan Life Insurance Company References Allport Gordon ( 1960 ). Religion in the Developing Personality. Academy...
Image
Logged, age-standardized infectious mortality in U.S. cities by region. Inf...
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in Regional and Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in U.S. Cities, 1900–1948
> Demography
Published: 13 June 2019
Fig. 4 Logged, age-standardized infectious mortality in U.S. cities by region. Infectious mortality is standardized to eliminate variation in the age distributions of cities. The trend lines depict the logged ratio of actual to expected infectious mortality, based on the city’s age distribution.
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Journal Article
Recent developments in seasonally adjusting vital statistics
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Demography (1966) 3 (2): 305–318.
Published: 01 June 1966
... in the underlying trend of the rates. Several methods have recently been developed, using an electronic computer, to identify and remove the seasonal component from time series of monthly data. The methods are basically adaptations of a standard technique—the ratio-to-moving average method—for seasonally adjusting...
Journal Article
Fertility in urban areas of Mexico: Implications for the theory of the demographic transition
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Demography (1967) 4 (1): 363–373.
Published: 01 March 1967
...) changes in urban fertility are inversely related to changes in the proportion of the urban population employed in the secondary sector of the economy. At each census date from 1940 to 1960, the association between urban fertility (age-standardized child-woman ratio adjusted for infant mortality...
Journal Article
Birth outcome, not pregnancy process: Reply to van der Veen
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Demography (1998) 35 (4): 519–527.
Published: 01 November 1998
... of Health and Human Services 1995), the same data set described in connection with Table 1. The coefficients are shown in the form of odds ratios, which demonstrate the extremely strong, yet differing mag- nitudes of association between the birth outcome categories and infant mortality. Although the three...
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Infectious mortality, standardized and unstandardized, in U.S. cities by re...
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in Regional and Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in U.S. Cities, 1900–1948
> Demography
Published: 13 June 2019
the logged ratio of actual to expected infectious mortality, based on the city’s age distribution.
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Journal Article
Educational Inequality in Adult Mortality: An Assessment with Death Certificate Data from Michigan
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Demography (1995) 32 (2): 215–229.
Published: 01 May 1995
... differences in mortality by comparing age-standardized mortality ratios, a more rigorous comparative strategy is to model educational differences in mortality rates over the life cycle. Hence we examine educational differences in mortality by fitting a log-rates model computed with the GUM statistical...
View articletitled, Educational Inequality in Adult <span class="search-highlight">Mortality</span>: An Assessment with Death Certificate Data from Michigan
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for article titled, Educational Inequality in Adult <span class="search-highlight">Mortality</span>: An Assessment with Death Certificate Data from Michigan
Journal Article
Review symposium
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Demography (1973) 10 (1): 125–136.
Published: 01 February 1973
... mortality ratio). One can conceive of occasions, however, when aIl one had to work with would be the num- ber of deaths at each age for aseries of populations (e.g., counties for intercensal or postcensal dates) , but age-specific population data Ior only one group (e.g, state or national estimates...
Journal Article
Demography (2022) 59 (3): 1023–1043.
Published: 01 June 2022
.... trans), and performed log-rank tests for equality of survivor functions ( Savage 1956 ). We also calculated age-cohort mortality rates per thousand along with standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) comparing the trans cohort to their non-trans counterparts. To test our second and third hypotheses—whether...
FIGURES
View articletitled, Differences in All-Cause <span class="search-highlight">Mortality</span> Among Transgender and Non-Transgender People Enrolled in Private Insurance
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for article titled, Differences in All-Cause <span class="search-highlight">Mortality</span> Among Transgender and Non-Transgender People Enrolled in Private Insurance
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
The Consequences of Incarceration for Mortality in the United States
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Demography (2020) 57 (2): 577–598.
Published: 19 March 2020
... to higher hazard ratios: former prisoners experience mortality rates between 2.41 and 2.69 times higher than those for the population that has not been in prison by time t . Standard errors from weighted models are, as expected, higher, and regression estimates are more uncertain. Although unweighted...
FIGURES
View articletitled, The Consequences of Incarceration for <span class="search-highlight">Mortality</span> in the United States
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for article titled, The Consequences of Incarceration for <span class="search-highlight">Mortality</span> in the United States
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Incarcerating death: Mortality in U.S. state correctional facilities, 1985–1998
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Demography (2010) 47 (3): 587–607.
Published: 01 August 2010
... of each of the groups to that of the urban Polish population. Each cloistered group had mortality levels lower than the urban population, as measured by standard mortality ratios. Males who competed in the Olympics during their youth, however, fared better than monks, and monks fared better than actors...
Journal Article
The impact of specific occupation on mortality in the U.S. National Longitudinal Mortality Study
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Demography (1999) 36 (3): 355–367.
Published: 01 August 1999
... results from the 1971 Decennial Supplement and the Longitudinal Survey. They identified agricultural occupations, such as farmers, foresters, fisherman, and administrative and pro- fessional occupations, as having consistent and markedly low Standard Mortality Ratios (SMR's), and miners, glass and ceramic...
View articletitled, The impact of specific occupation on <span class="search-highlight">mortality</span> in the U.S. National Longitudinal <span class="search-highlight">Mortality</span> Study
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for article titled, The impact of specific occupation on <span class="search-highlight">mortality</span> in the U.S. National Longitudinal <span class="search-highlight">Mortality</span> Study
Image
Estimated region fixed-effect and year-effect coefficients. We fit separate...
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in Regional and Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in U.S. Cities, 1900–1948
> Demography
Published: 13 June 2019
Fig. 3 Estimated region fixed-effect and year-effect coefficients. We fit separate regressions for each period, allowing the year effect to differ across regions. The regression outcome is logged, age-standardized infectious mortality, representing the logged ratio of actual to expected
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Journal Article
Residential Mobility Across Local Areas in the United States and the Geographic Distribution of the Healthy Population
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Demography (2014) 51 (3): 777–809.
Published: 30 April 2014
... disadvantageous mortality schedules through middle and old age, not only in comparison with white or black national averages or with black residents of more-affluent communities, but also compared with black residents of high-poverty rural communities. For example, age-standardized mortality ratios in 2000 for 18...
FIGURES
Journal Article
On Mortality
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Demography (1977) 14 (4): 381–389.
Published: 01 November 1977
... years earlier which clearly showed the blurring of dif- ferentials in all except the lowest class. The standardized mortality ratios in 1959-1963 decreased steadily from 143 for Class I (lowest class) to 76 for Class V (highest class), as compared with ratios fluctuating from 118 (Class I) to 94 to 10I...
Image
Logged, age-standardized infectious mortality in U.S. cities by region. Inf...
Available to Purchase
in Regional and Racial Inequality in Infectious Disease Mortality in U.S. Cities, 1900–1948
> Demography
Published: 13 June 2019
Fig. 2 Logged, age-standardized infectious mortality in U.S. cities by region. Infectious mortality is standardized to eliminate variation in the age distributions of cities. Each dot represents the logged ratio of actual to expected infectious mortality in one city in one year, based
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Journal Article
The geometric mean of the age-specific death rates as a summary index of mortality
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Demography (1970) 7 (3): 317–324.
Published: 01 August 1970
..., and accurately reflects exponential mortality patterns. 26 1 2011 © Population Association of America 1970 1970 Standardize Rate Relative Index Standard Population Versus Ratio Proportional Difference references Coale , Ansley J. , & Demeny , P. ( 1966 ). Regional...
Journal Article
Ethnic and Birth Weight Differences in Cause-Specific Infant Mortality
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Demography (1989) 26 (2): 335–343.
Published: 01 May 1989
... by examining Tables 2 and 3 simultaneously can one discern a fairly complete pattern of ethnic differences and of birth weight differences within ethnic groups. I have also calculated standard errors. These standard errors are calculated for the logged odds ratios, since the sampling distribution of the odds...
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