Gaois

Cóip statach de shonraí a easpórtáiltear ó IATE ó am go chéile atá sa chnuasach seo. Níor cheart glacadh leis gurb ionann i gcónaí an t-eolas a thugtar faoi iontráil anseo agus a bhfuil sa leagan reatha den iontráil ar IATE. Is féidir an leagan reatha sin a cheadú ach cliceáil ar an nasc atá ar thaobh na láimhe deise ag barr gach iontrála. Breis eolais »

1 toradh

  1. SOCIAL QUESTIONS|health|medical science|epidemiology
    ráta mortlaíochta bonnlíne Tagairt Faomhadh an téarma seo mar chuid de Thionscadal Lex
    ga
    ráta básmhaireachta bonnlíne Tagairt Faomhadh an téarma seo mar chuid de Thionscadal Lex
    ga
    Basismortalität
    de
    baseline mortality rate | baseline mortality
    en
    Sainmhíniú 'normal' mortality level in a given population Tagairt National Research Council (US) Roundtable on the Demography of Forced Migration; Reed HE, Keely CB, editors. Forced Migration & Mortality. Washington (DC): National Academies Press (US); 2001. '1, Understanding Mortality Patterns in Complex Humanitarian Emergencies.' (14.4.2021)
    Nóta 1) Epidemiologists often refer to a 'return to baseline level', which indicates a stabilization of the situation and potential end to the mortality crisis.2) Mortality rates (MRs) describe the frequency with which deaths are occurring in a given population over a given time. If these are higher than the expected (baseline) MR in non-crisis conditions in that population, we can say that the difference between observed crisis and expected non-crisis MRs represents excess mortality, i.e. the mortality attributable to the crisis, above and beyond deaths that would have occurred in normal conditions.
    taux de mortalité de référence | mortalité de référence
    fr
    Sainmhíniú mortalité considérée comme normale dans une population donnée pendant un temps donné Tagairt COM-FR d'après: National Research Council (US) Roundtable on the Demography of Forced Migration; Reed HE, Keely CB, editors. Forced Migration & Mortality. Washington (DC): National Academies Press (US); 2001. '1, Understanding Mortality Patterns in Complex Humanitarian Emergencies.'