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Death Rate

Mortality rate is the number of deaths in a country per 1,000 people, per year.

666 Questions

How many people die snow skiing in Australia per year?

i dont no that is why i am on this sight to find it da

How many people are killed every minute in alcohol related collissions?

No one dies from drinking alcohol, only from abusively drinking alcohol. When consumed in moderation, alcohol is associated with better health and greater longevity than is abstaining from alcohol. However, the abuse of alcohol kills an unknown number of people.

What was responsible for the declining of death in the nineteenth century?

What contributed to a lower death rate in the 19th century, was better nutrition improvements in personal hygiene and public health.

How many people are die in India per day?

Roughly 24,503 per day. This number is based on a death rate of 7.23 per 1000 people annually from 2013 with India having a population of 1.237 billion according to google. There is truly no way to know exactly how many people die per day in India and the number would likely fluctuate heavily. This average is purely the representation of the year 2013.

Why are death rates decreasing?

Information about new drugs and techniques for healthy living come to developing nations all the time. Much of the world has the internet and modern information. Latrines end the spread of much disease. One pill a year wipes out worms. Removing standing water reduces mosquitoes and can rid an area of malaria. Circumcising men ends female to male transmission of AIDS. Getting rid of worms in women reduces a woman's chances of catching AIDS. Knowledge is power. People can accomplish quite a lot in spite of their corrupt government.

How do births deaths and migration contribute to Germany's growth?

im Not a Pro But I Think That BABYS DIE OFTEN CAUSE OF WEIGHT PROBLEMS,BREATHING PROBLEMS ETC. AND GERMANS DIE FROM ALL THE CRAZY STUFF THEY DO

Why are so many missing people found in rivers?

I never heard about that, but here are some guesses. People may have lost their footing, may have gotten caught by the strong river current, they were murdered, eaten & or killed by animals, stay near water sources if they get lost & something happens, etc.

How many boomers die in US each year?

In an actuarial sense, there is no constant number of people born between 1946 and 1964 who die each year. However, just a small part of that population will be alive in 2059-60. In 2011, there were about 77 million boomers, in 2030, there will be about 60 million and in 2059, there will be 2.4 million.

How many people have died in the US as of January 2011?

In the US, a person dies every 13 seconds and a baby is born every 31 seconds.

According to the statistics of the CDC - The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention - the number of people who died in the US in 2007 was 2,423,712 (see Related link).

How many people can die from an atomic bomb in 1 minute?

Cannot answer without much more information, as this depends on the yield of the bomb, altitude of the detonation, population density around ground zero, housing construction, cloud cover, weather, and many other variables.

A low yield bomb over an area of high population density may kill many more than a high yield bomb over an area of low population density. Cloud cover may reduce death rate. A high yield bomb over an area of very high population density on a cloudless day could produce many deaths!

What is the death rate of butterflies?

They have a 100% death rate- they all die. Most live for less than a year.

Some such a monarchs fly south and live all winter then return lay eggs and die.

Only people born in US in 1945 and are still alive in 2010?

NO ! There are lots of people that are still alive that aren't in the USA .

What is the death of birth of lukman hakim?

i don't know, what about it ..

i'm so sorry ..

What determines the fate of a star?

a star: After millions to billions of years, depending on the initial mass of the star, the continuous fusion of hydrogen into helium will cause a build-up of helium in the core. Larger and hotter stars produce helium more rapidly than cooler and less massive ones. The accumulation of helium, which is denser than hydrogen, in the core causes gravitational self-compression and a gradual increase in the rate of fusion. Higher temperatures must be attained to resist this increase in gravitational compression and to maintain a steady state.

Eventually, the core exhausts its supply of hydrogen, and without the outward pressure generated by the fusion of hydrogen to counteract the force of gravity, it contracts until either electron degeneracy becomes sufficient to oppose gravity, or the core becomes hot enough (around 100 megakelvins) for helium fusion to begin. Which of these happens first depends upon the star's mass.