Open AccessJournal Article
Geographical trends in infant mortality: England and Wales, 1970-2006.
TLDR
Levels of infant mortality declined over time even in the most deprived areas with a narrowing of absolute differences in rates between areas, but within all regions and local authority types a strong relationship was found between ward level deprivation and infant mortality rates.Abstract:
At national level in England and Wales, infant mortality rates fell rapidly from the early 1970s and into the 1980s. Subnational areas have also experienced a reduction in levels of infant mortality. While rates continued to fall to 2006, the rate of reduction has slowed. Although the Government Office Regions Yorkshire and The Humber, the North West and the West Midlands and the Office for National Statistics local authority types Cities and Services and London Cosmopolitan have experienced relatively large absolute reductions in infant mortality, their rates remained high compared with the national average. Within all regions and local authority types, a strong relationship was found between ward level deprivation and infant mortality rates. Nevertheless, levels of infant mortality declined over time even in the most deprived areas with a narrowing of absolute differences in rates between areas. Areas in which the level of deprivation eased have experienced greater than average reductions in levels of infant mortality.read more
Citations
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The effectiveness of antenatal care programmes to reduce infant mortality and preterm birth in socially disadvantaged and vulnerable women in high-income countries: a systematic review
TL;DR: There was insufficient evidence of adequate quality to recommend routine implementation of any of the programmes as a means of reducing infant mortality in disadvantaged/vulnerable women.
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Identifying Change Over Time in Small Area Socio-Economic Deprivation
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use the Townsend index to identify whether small areas have changed their level of deprivation over time and thereby be able to assess the impact of area-based planning initiatives.
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Rising premature mortality in the UK’s persistently deprived areas: Only a Scottish phenomenon?
TL;DR: It is found that male premature mortality rates rose by over 14% in Scotland over the 10-year period between the early 1990s and 2000s in persistently deprived areas and that the rise among men in Scotland was driven by results for Glasgow where mortality rates rising by over 15% during the decade.
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Deprivation (im)mobility and cause-specific premature mortality in Scotland
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that premature mortality rates increased significantly over this twenty year period in 638 persistently most deprived areas of Scotland, and it is suggested that these persistency most deprived Scottish areas deserve special attention and may be particularly appropriate sites for public health interventions related to these causes of premature death.
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Who benefits from environmental policy? An environmental justice analysis of air quality change in Britain, 2001-2011
TL;DR: In this article, a social distribution of air quality analysis to consider how the distribution changed over the following decade (2001-2011), a period when significant efforts to meet EC air quality directive limits have been made, and air quality has improved.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
Geography conversion tables: a framework for conversion of data between geographical units
TL;DR: In this article, a conceptual framework for data conversion between geographical units is developed and a typology of errors when estimating data by geographical conversion is complemented by empirical measurement for a variety of UK examples.
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The Global Distribution of Infant Mortality: A subnational spatial view.
TL;DR: Assigning both national and subnational data to map grid cells so that they may be easily integrated with other geographic data, infant mortality rates for environmental regions, including biomes and coastal zones, by continent are generated.
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2. The British Population: Patterns, Trends, and Processes
TL;DR: Lang uag e: English Year: 1992 Reg ion / Country: Europe Western | Europe | United Kingdom as mentioned in this paper The author's work was published in 1992, 1992, London, UK