Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017160 (gastroenteritis)
11,398 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The data presented indicate that the disturbing upward trend in infant mortality in North Carolina has been arrested and possibly reversed during the 1959 through 1963 period. Information obtained from death certificates indicates that infections accounted for slightly more than half (52.4%) of the postneonatal deaths occurring in the study periods. The most common type of infection was influenza and pneumonia, followed by gastroenteritis and colitis, infective and parasitic disease, meningitis, and acute respiratory infections, in that order of frequency. Infections were responsible for a greater percentage of the postneonatal deaths among nonwhite (58.5%) than amon white infants (40.7%). the postneonatal death rate from infections was 13.4 for nonwhite infants and 2.2 for white infants. The next most common cause of postneonatal mortality -- congenital malformations -- was relatively more important in the white race, being responsible for approximately 25% of white deaths and only 6% of nonwhite deaths. I11 defined and unknown causes ranked 3rd in importance, with postneonatal death rates of 3.0 for nonwhite and .4 for white infants. Accidents, wich ranked 4th, were responsible for approximately 10% of the postneonatal deaths in each race. In both races, the risk of postneonatal death was greater in infants born to younger mothers, partiuclarly those under age 20. For the infants of mothers under age 15, the postneonatal death rate was 3 times as high as for those of 20-24 year old mothers. Beginning with age 20, the risk of postneonatal mortality decreases gradually as maternal age increases up to 35 years, when it begins to rise again in the white race. In nonwhite races, the decline continoues to age 40. Infants born to young mothers of nonwhite races suffer relatively higher postneonatal mortality than do their white counterparts. The postneonatal mortality rate is lowest for 1st born infants of both races. Among nonwhites, it is highest for the 2nd born; in the white race, it rises with each successive birth, with the exception of the 5th. Postneonatal mortality among very small white infants (those weighing less thatn 1500 gm at birth) was some 7 times that of infants weighing more than 2500 gm; it was even higher in nonwhite races being nearly 2 1/2 times that of the white group and appoproximately 4 times higher than the rate for nonwhite infants weighing more than 2500 gm at birth. The risk of postneonatal death for nonwhite infants born illegitimately was 1 1/2 times as great for those born in wedlock. Among white infants, the risk was almost twice as great for those born out of wedlock.
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PMID:Postneonatal deaths in North Carolina, 1959-1963. 523 49