The church is growing most in poor places like Africa and Asia where infant mortality remains high. |
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Improved health services have decreased the infant mortality rate and the general death rate. |
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The rate of infant mortality is eleven deaths for every one thousand live births. |
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The neighborhood suffers high rates of infant mortality, asthma, birth defects and cancer. |
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People are open to the greatest health risks during infancy and early childhood, and in Egypt and Nubia there was a high infant mortality rate. |
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One of the most sensitive indicators of a nation's health is that of infant mortality, the death rate of children under 1 year of age. |
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One of the most significant demographic changes was the decline of infant mortality at the turn of the century. |
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The study will be the first to measure the potential effect of kangaroo care on neonatal and infant mortality. |
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One of the most remarkable achievements of capitalism is the drop in infant mortality. |
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The number of child deaths in the district contributed to one of the highest infant mortality rates in the country last year. |
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I don't think I want to poke at that one any more closely, except to say that high infant mortality rates and higher fertility tend to co-occur. |
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Both experience unconscionable rates of morbidity, infant mortality, and violent deaths. |
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Research also suggests teenage parents tend to have poorer ante-natal health, lower birthweight babies and higher infant mortality rates. |
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The UK's worst six constituencies for premature death and infant mortality are inside Glasgow's city boundaries. |
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Having fewer low birthweight and pre-term babies means lower infant mortality. |
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The authors also cautioned that low infant mortality and longer life expectancy tend to increase the incidence and prevalence of cancer. |
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Death during childbirth was commonplace and infant mortality devastatingly high. |
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The malnourished suffer from impaired health, reduced physical strength, diminished mental alertness, and high rates of infant mortality. |
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Some Indian tribes experienced epidemics of measles and influenza, with infant mortality rates reaching 50 percent. |
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The infant mortality rate may be something to boast of, but death still comes early for Cuban rural workers. |
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In those days of high infant mortality, it was not enough to have one son, or even an 'heir and a spare' as the British say. |
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The death rate and infant mortality have declined, and life expectancy has increased. |
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Captive cheetah breeding programs have been plagued by low birth rates and high infant mortality. |
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Major indicators of social well-being, from infant mortality to life expectancy, had rolled backward. |
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Aboriginal Peoples continue to face high infant mortality rates and low life expectancy. |
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The effect of immunization programmes on infant mortality has been widely documented and the general tendency is clear. |
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From infant mortality to life below the poverty line, the country's unhappiest trendlines run remorselessly upwards. |
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Iodine deficiency also increases the chance of infant mortality, miscarriage and stillbirth. |
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In its infant mortality program, Richmond's public health nurses provided not only milk and ice to their patients, but also provided the layette when needed for newborns. |
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This view seems to extend, regrettably, to infant mortality and an evidently somewhat phlegmatic attitude to the ease of a replacement pregnancy. |
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In the rural areas and urban slum areas, this is a contributing factor to the high rates of infant mortality. |
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Also, the water was not always clean and carried various amoeba, hepatitis A and typhoid, the main causes of infant mortality in the oasis. |
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In Belgium and Germany high perinatal and infant mortality rates are reported in migrant women from Morocco and Turkey. |
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Very often this is the cause of a variety of diseases and of the high infant mortality rate in third world countries. |
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Romania's infant mortality rate was the highest in Europe, with children dying from illnesses that were preventable and curable. |
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Studies have found that migrant women receive inadequate or no antenatal care, and show higher rates of stillborn children and infant mortality. |
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Decrease of the number of stillborn children and infant mortality rate, and health child development. |
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The working classes were most affected by infant mortality, but it also wreaked havoc in the wealthier classes. |
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The situation is also characterized by a high infant mortality rate, malnourished children, poor sanitation and a high rate of school drop out. |
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We are still a long way from a world where no one goes hungry and where the infant mortality rate is comparable to that in the West. |
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Canada had the lowest infant mortality rate of the three countries in 2003 at 5.3 per 1,000 live births. |
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The infant mortality rate among males is consistently higher than for females. |
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The age of the mother is also an important determinant for the infant mortality rate. |
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The infant mortality rate refers to the number of infants who die in the first year of life, per 1,000 live births. |
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The main causes of infant mortality include malnutrition and lack of medical care. |
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Criteria used for focalization: poverty line, maternal mortality, infant mortality and education net coverage. |
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Nevertheless, infant mortality remains high and this, along with poor investment in human and social welfare, has kept birthrates high. |
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Soaring birthrates, high infant mortality, alcoholism, and declining life expectancy among males add up to a regionwide social crisis. |
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Their efforts bore fruit and the infant mortality rate declined considerably. |
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Afghanistan has a high maternal mortality rate and the world's second-highest infant mortality rate. |
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According to early data for 2003, the infant mortality rate is expected to go back down. |
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The number of deaths of women during childbirth is down and the infant mortality rate is down. |
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The infant mortality rate also fell over the same period, from 158 to 104 per 1,000 live births. |
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The infant mortality rate has increased due to malnutrition and lack of treatment for mild diseases. |
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Montreal's infant mortality rate at the time was staggering: between 200 and 290 infants out of every 1,000 died before the age of one. |
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The infant mortality rate is double that of the Canadian population, the unemployment rate is almost triple, and income is less than half. |
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Women in Haiti suffer high rates of maternal and infant mortality, which is a key indicator of a country's overall health. |
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They must understand we need the troops to be in Afghanistan to deliver the aid that allows infant mortality to drop. |
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It is only because infant mortality rates have reduced so substantially in the last century that these deaths have become a matter of comment and research. |
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The infant mortality rate stood at 87.83 deaths per thousand live births. |
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Life expectancy at birth is forecast to increase from 80 years to 85 years in 2050 and infant mortality is expected to decline. |
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Moreover, 100 per cent of Cuba's children had access to full health services, and the infant mortality rate had been reduced to six per 1,000 live births. |
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Cot death syndrome, which strikes during the first year of the child's life, is the third leading cause of infant mortality in this age group and, on average, affects one baby in 2,000 in France. |
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In Canada, Aboriginal children rank with many children in the developing world on several key indicators, including infant mortality and injury deaths. |
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A few years ago, the community suffered from a severely high infant mortality rate due to sickness and disease caused by poor hygiene and malnutrition. |
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This reallocation explains an enduring mystery: why Indian children are more stunted than sub-Saharan African children, even though their families are richer and maternal and infant mortality rates are lower. |
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Many wealthy countries have excellent child health services and extraordinary progress has been made in reducing infant mortality, low birthweight, and vaccine-preventable disease to unprecedentedly low levels. |
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It should also take measures to improve children's health, promote prenatal care, vaccination and breastfeeding and reduce the infant mortality rate. |
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The March of Dimes works to improve the health of babies by preventing birth defects, premature birth and infant mortality. |
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Unfortunately, certain groups experienced much higher infant mortality rates than the overall average. |
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Gonzalez suggests that Cuban medical staff classify some after-birth deaths as prebirth in order to keep the infant mortality rate low. |
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The lack of basic services is resulting not only in high maternal and infant mortality but also in outbreaks of waterborne diseases such as cholera and meningitis. |
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Biochemical and palaeopathological investigations and infant mortality in the early Middle Ages. |
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The genetic disorders also contribute to 10 per cent of infant mortality and 52 per cent of mortality among older children. |
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The infant mortality rate also declined sharply. |
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Consequently, Dalits have higher levels of infant mortality, illiteracy, and are denied access to basic education, health care, and the opportunity to earn a living. |
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The infant mortality rate has fallen, but the risk of death in the first month of life and perinatal care, the lack of which is the primary cause of death before one year of age, are among the health-care policy challenges. |
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However, the health situation of many Roma remains worryingly poorer than the majority population, with an infant mortality rate twice as high among Roma than non-Roma. |
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He linked the increasing infant mortality rate to poor nutrition, improper care of pregnant mothers, self-medication and short birth intervals. |
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When one sewer truck started working in Orangi, Pakistan, the infant mortality rate sank from 130 deaths in 1000 births in the early 1980s to fewer than 40 per 1000 births today. |
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For example, Aboriginal children and youth have higher infant mortality rates and lower life expectancies compared to the non-Aboriginal population. |
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Infant and child mortality rates are particularly sensitive to economic security with low levels of infant mortality correlating well with higher levels of economic growth and reduced rates of population increase. |
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In Cuzco, one of the country's poorest departments, as many as 84 out of every 1,000 infants die before their first birthday, compared to an infant mortality rate of 17 per 1,000 live births in the capital, Lima. |
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Its objective is to halve malnutrition and infant mortality rates. |
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The infant mortality rate climbed slightly. |
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Hunger is wreaking havoc and infant mortality is on the rise again. |
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That's a product for infant mortality disaster. |
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And yet infant mortality rates improved little. |
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Azerbaijan appreciated achievements in ensuring high living standards, reducing maternal and infant mortality, ensuring freedom of religion, and including human rights education in school curricula. |
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Of key concern to the government is the issue of safe motherhood, as inadequate healthcare during pregnancy and delivery is the main cause of the country's high maternal and infant mortality rates. |
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The education campaigns that targeted mothers in an effort to reduce infant mortality focussed on the fact that breastfeeding was the best way to keep babies healthy. |
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Life expectancy at birth takes account of infant mortality but not prenatal mortality. |
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Of particular interest are child, infant mortality, and life expectancy which are often used as an indicator of the general health and well-being of a population. |
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Furthermore, children of all ages had been provided with access to education and enjoyed a substantially increased standard of living, which had led to a decrease in infant mortality. |
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In populations with high infant mortality rates, LEB is highly sensitive to the rate of death in the first few years of life. |
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In general, Singapore has had the lowest infant mortality rate in the world for the past two decades. |
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This casts some doubt on 23 April date, as high infant mortality rates meant parents would usually baptise their children shortly after birth. |
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Maternal and infant mortality are high partly because of poor access to health facilities in isolated rural areas. |
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When the death rate falls or improves, this may include lower infant mortality rate and increased child survival. |
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Sweden ranks in the top five countries with respect to low infant mortality. |
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Portugal's infant mortality rate has dropped sharply since the late 1970s, when 24 of 1000 newborns died in the first year of life. |
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Its population enjoys the highest life expectancy and the third lowest infant mortality rate in the world. |
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Disease and infant mortality increased in the 1960s immediately after the revolution, when half of Cuba's 6,000 doctors left the country. |
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The infant mortality rate in Haiti in 2013 was 55 deaths per 1,000 live births, compared to a rate of 6 per 1,000 in other countries. |
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Babies were not given human social status until they reached two or three years of age due to the high infant mortality rates. |
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The World Bank has helped the Paraguayan government reduce the country's maternal and infant mortality. |
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Therefore, the influence of the health-care services in decreasing the infant mortality rate is greater in reducing mortally in the post-neonatal period. |
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Poor maternal health, sexually transmitted infections, infant mortality, violence, abuse, illiteracy, isolation, psychological trauma and suicide are common among young brides. |
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There is strong evidence that economic shocks in poor countries cause rising infant mortality, falling school enrollment, and falls in nutrition levels. |
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Life expectancy at birth was measured in years as average life expectancy of male and female population, infant mortality rate is measured per 1,000 live births and death rate measured as crude death rate per 1,000 people. |
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The display also shows the crude death rate and the infant mortality rate that would be calculated in the first year if you chose the corresponding life table. |
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If neither of the first two options is possible, a third option is to compare the crude death rate and infant mortality rate that would result from choosing each model life table with the actual estimates of these indicators. |
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Swiss factory inspector Dr Fridolin Schuler was one of the first to recognise that many illnesses and the high rate of infant mortality in the working classes were caused by this inadequate nutrition. |
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Reform organizations are founded to tackle social problems such as alcoholism, the insalubrity of working-class neighbourhoods, infant mortality and discrimination against women. |
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That new measure prevented mothers from being afraid of going to see a paediatrician, and therefore helped to reduce infant mortality and poverty. |
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There is a need to control such infant mortality rate, he said. |
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The infant mortality rate is the ratio of the number of deaths among children less than one year old during a given year to the number of live births during the same year. |
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Birth rates, infant mortality rates, and death rates are lower in cities than in rural areas due to better access to education, medicines, and hospitals. |
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According to The World Factbook, Macau has the fourth highest life expectancy in the world, while its infant mortality rate ranks among the lowest in the world. |
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During the quinquennium from 1991 to 1995, infant mortality increased. |
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The poverty of the region, and the high maternal mortality and infant mortality had led to calls from WHO of family planning and encouragement of smaller families. |
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In the past 5 years infant mortality rates of malaria have dropped. |
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