The sumation (each stratum of population) of risk * population size.
For example:
(risk*population size of group 1) + (risk*population size of group 2) + ... + (risk*population size of group n)
The standardized mortality ratio (SMR) is calculated by dividing the observed number of deaths in a study population by the expected number of deaths based on age-specific mortality rates from a reference population. The formula is: SMR = (Observed Deaths / Expected Deaths) × 100. An SMR of 100 indicates that the mortality rate in the study population is equal to that of the reference population, while values above or below 100 indicate higher or lower mortality, respectively.
The death rate is calculated using the formula: [ \text{Death Rate} = \left( \frac{\text{Number of Deaths}}{\text{Total Population}} \right) \times 1000 ] This formula expresses the number of deaths per 1,000 individuals in a given population over a specific time period, typically one year.
You need to know the probability of the event in question. Then the expected frequency for that event occurring is that probability times the number of times the experiment was repeated.
There are a number of formulas that will work to calculate a population's growth rate. You could use births minus deaths in a year for example.
deaths under 1 year of age/ number of live births x 1000
Swaroop's index is computed using this formula: (number of deaths among those 50 years old and over in a calendar year divided by the total number of deaths ) X 100
number of deaths by total number of deaths in a population
( Number of infant death / number of life birth ) X 1000
1.5 million was the number of deaths in the Armenian genocide.
The number of deaths are limited only by the number of attempts at the game. Whether the number listed will display the correct number of deaths will be dependent on the game's programming.
Expected successes= Theoretical Probability · Trials P(event) = Number of possible out comes divided by total number of possible
They are not expected to grow in number on the contrary the are expected to decrease in number as the number of humans increase.