Forum Sains Indonesia




*
Selamat datang, Pengunjung. Silahkan masuk atau mendaftar. Apakah anda lupa aktivasi email?
Pebruari 10, 2012, 12:02:25 PM

Masuk dengan nama pengguna, kata sandi dan lama sesi

Artikel Sains

Aku Cinta ForSa

  ForSa on FB  ForSa on Twitter

Pranala Luar

ShoutBox!

Last 10 Shouts:

 

semut-ireng

Hari Ini jam 07:37:05 AM
 :)
 

exile_rstd

Kemarin jam 06:04:39 PM
sampai di Tangerang jam 05.30 pagi. seneng udh plg tapi jadi kangen sm Yogya ;D
 

MonDay

Kemarin jam 01:56:29 PM
boleh promosi ga dsn ya?
 

lam_lavoisier09

Kemarin jam 12:03:50 PM
salam kenal semua,,, ikut nimbrung yoo.. :)
 ;)
 

semut-ireng

Kemarin jam 08:30:33 AM
 :)
 

Farabi

Pebruari 08, 2012, 08:04:23 PM
Semut: Kirain dah mahasiswa. Bagus kan, jadi terpacu buat belajar. ;D Heu...
 

semut-ireng

Pebruari 07, 2012, 06:24:47 PM
lagian guru gw kenceng banget,  yang ga ngerjakan PR ditulis di papan pengumuman ..... ;D
 

dzikripratama

Pebruari 07, 2012, 04:18:13 PM
aduh pusing banyak PR :)
 

yo anes

Pebruari 07, 2012, 10:52:07 AM
hello slm knl all
kalau ingin mendapatkan beasiswa untuk tahun ini bagaiman caranya? :)
 

semut-ireng

Pebruari 07, 2012, 06:12:11 AM
PR yang lama belum dikerjakan,  dikasih PR baru lagi,  pusing deh  :D

Show 50 latest

Penulis Topik: [INFO] World Health Statistics 2007  (Dibaca 2928 kali)

0 Anggota dan 1 Pengunjung sedang melihat topik ini.

Offline reborn

  • Founder
  • Profesor
  • *****
  • Tulisan: 2218
  • IQ: 317
  • Gender: Pria
  • ForSa
    • Lihat Profil
    • Blog ForSa
[INFO] World Health Statistics 2007
« pada: Mei 20, 2007, 01:17:00 AM »
Buat info aja. WHO ngeluarin World Health Statistics 2007 termasuk statistik life expectancy, healthy life expectancy, neonatal mortality, maternal mortality ratio, deaths due to HIV/AIDS, dll dari 193 negara anggota WHO. Tapi barusan gw cek online querynya, kok datanya masih banyak yang update terakhirnya 2005 misalnya ???

>
Kutip
World Health Statistics 2007

World health statistics 2007 presents the most recent health statistics for WHO’s 193 Member States. This third edition includes a section with 10 highlights of global health statistics for the past year as well as an expanded set of 50 health statistics.

World Health Statistics 2007 has been collated from publications and databases produced by WHO’s technical programmes and regional offices. The core set of indicators was selected on the basis of their relevance to global health, the availability and quality of the data, and the accuracy and comparability of estimates. The statistics for the indicators are derived from an interactive process of data collection, compilation, quality assessment and estimation occurring among WHO’s technical programmes and its Member States. During this process, WHO strives to maximize the accessibility, accuracy, comparability and transparency of health statistics.

Ini beberapa data statistik dari AP :

Kutip
Sierra Leone registered the shortest male life expectancy at 37 years - the same as that of girls in Swaziland, who were at the bottom of the female list, WHO's "World Health Statistics 2007" show.

Females in Japan, who traditionally lead the world tables, have a life expectancy of 86 years, the same as last year's statistics. San Marino men, who tied with Japanese men last year at 79, added a year to get ahead.

Men in the United States have a 75-year life expectancy; U.S. women could reach 80.

Following San Marino on the male side were Australia, Iceland, Japan, Sweden and Switzerland at 79 years and then Canada, Israel, Italy, Monaco and Singapore at 78. France was tied for 12th place at 77 years with a group of countries including New Zealand and Britain. Germany was at 76 years. Cuba was among the countries that tied the U.S. for 33rd place at 75 years.

Countries with long-living women include Monaco, 85 years, and Andorra, Australia, France, Italy, San Marino, Spain and Switzerland at 84. Canada tied Iceland and Sweden at 83 years for women, and Germany was in a group at 82 years. Britain came in at 81 years. Costa Rica and Denmark tied the United States for 32nd place at 80 years.

Afghanistan is the toughest place for babies, with an infant mortality rate of 165 in 1,000 live births, compared with the two babies who die per 1,000 born in Singapore or Iceland.

But Sierra Leone is worse than Afghanistan for mothers' survival, with a maternal mortality rate of 2,000 per 100,000 live births. The rate for Afghanistan was 1,900. Ireland did best at four deaths, followed by Spain, Italy, Finland, Canada and Austria at five deaths.

It also noted that tobacco use had a "high prevalence among the world's poorest people," and suggested that the low life expectancy in some countries could be linked to high rates of diseases like HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis.

Siapa tau ada yang butuh statistiknya buat bikin2 apa gitu  ;) Atau malah mo bantuin update statistik buat Indo   ;D

 

Copyright © 2006-2011 Forum Sains Indonesia