Читать книгу Rural Hygiene - Henry N. Ogden - Страница 8
Table I. Death-rates in Various Countries
ОглавлениеAustralia | 11.7 |
Austria | 24.2 |
Belgium | 17.0 |
Denmark | 14.8 |
England | 16.0 |
France | 19.6 |
Germany | 19.9 |
Italy | 21.9 |
Japan | 20.9 |
Netherlands | 16.0 |
New York State | 17.1 |
Norway | 14.5 |
Spain | 26.1 |
Sweden | 15.5 |
United States | 16.3 |
Ideal death-rates.
There are special reasons why the Australian death-rate should be low, but, neglecting this one country entirely, it will be seen that Norway, Denmark, and Sweden have rates of 14.5, 14.8, and 15.5, respectively; rates which may be considered as good as any country can attain at the present time. But the United States, as a whole, has about one more death per 1000 than these countries, and New York State two more per 1000 population. This means that in New York State there are 16,000 more deaths each year than if the population were living in Sweden under Swedish conditions and laws. Or, expressed in another way, it means that in Sweden one out of every sixty-five persons dies each year, and in New York one out of every fifty-eight persons.
The rate in New York State is high because the state contains a large number of cities, and concentration of population generally implies all kinds of bad and unsanitary conditions. As a rule, a higher death-rate may be expected in a densely populated community than in a sparsely settled one, and we should therefore expect a rural community to show a lower death-rate than a city or urban community. It is not a fair estimate of the health of any rural locality, such as a county where no large cities exist, to compare its death-rate with the average of the state, or with the average rate of some other county which contains a large city. This fact is plainly brought out by the statistics in Table II, from the several sanitary districts into which the state of New York is divided, as shown on the map, Fig. 1:—