Demography.
Demography is actually the study of human populations, including their size, structure, and distribution. It focuses on analyzing factors such as birth rates, death rates, and migration patterns to understand population dynamics. Epidemiology is the field that specifically studies health, diseases, and medical care within populations.
Jacob S. Siegel has written: 'The demography and epidemiology of human health and aging' -- subject(s): Epidemiology, Health and hygiene, Age distribution (Demography), Population aging, Older people 'A generation of change' -- subject(s): Age distribution (Demography), Older people, Population, Social conditions, Statistics 'Demographic aspects of aging and the older population in the United States' -- subject(s): Older people, Statistics 'Coverage of the Hispanic population of the United States in the 1970 census' -- subject(s): Census, 19th, 1970, Hispanic Americans, Statistics 'The population of Hungary' -- subject(s): Population 'International trends and perspectives' -- subject(s): Age distribution (Demography), Aging, Older people, Statistics, Vital statistitics
why do we need demography?
My dad has a job in demography.
what is descriptive epidemiology
Our country has kept a demography of the deaths in Iraq.
criteria for studying epidemiology
The components of Demography are :- Fertility Mortality Migration
That is the correct spelling of "demography" (study of human populations).
Epidemiology is a science, not an illness.
SHE, not he, is Florence Nightingale. Yes, the lady of the lamp was made a member of the Royal Statistical Society (UK) and the American Statistical Association because of the groundbreaking epidemiological work that she undertook in the Crimean field hospitals.