Demography Human Population Ecology

Similar documents
Life Tables. Marie Diener-West, PhD Sukon Kanchanaraksa, PhD

I. DEMOGRAPHIC DETERMINANTS OF POPULATION AGEING

Critical Thinking ANALOGIES. Skills Worksheet


Biology Chapter 5 Test

Statistical Bulletin. National Life Tables, United Kingdom, Key Points. Summary. Introduction

World Population Growth

RATIOS, PROPORTIONS, PERCENTAGES, AND RATES

Prostate cancer statistics

1.17 Life expectancy at birth

Children in Egypt 2014 A STATISTICAL DIGEST

III. World Population Growth

United Nations INTRODUCTION. The World at Six Billion 1

30% Opening Prayer. Introduction. About 85% of women give birth at home with untrained attendants; the number is much higher in rural areas.

Death Data: CDC Wonder, Texas Health Data, and VitalWeb

Exponential Growth and Modeling

Life Expectancy for areas within Northern Ireland Published 2 nd October 2015

National Life Tables, United Kingdom:

Educational Attainment in the United States: 2015

INDICATOR REGION WORLD

Developmental Research Methods and Design. Types of Data. Research Methods in Aging. January, 2007

Lifetime Likelihood of Going to State or Federal Prison

The first three steps in a logistic regression analysis with examples in IBM SPSS. Steve Simon P.Mean Consulting

Lloyd Potter is the Texas State Demographer and the Director of the Texas State Data Center based at the University of Texas at San Antonio.

Health and Longevity. Global Trends. Which factors account for most of the health improvements in the 20th century?

Adolescent Mortality. Alaska s adolescent mortality rate is 29% higher than the national rate and almost 1.6 times the Healthy People 2010 target.

INDICATOR REGION WORLD

You re One in Seven Billion!

SCHOOL OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SCIENCES DON T FORGET TO RECODE YOUR MISSING VALUES

The Smartest Targets For The WORLD

Population, Health, and Human Well-Being-- Benin

IV. DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE OF THE OLDER POPULATION

Newborns' Early Medical Screening Coverage Study, 2010

Exercise Answers. Exercise B 2. C 3. A 4. B 5. A

Lago di Como, February 2006

CHAPTER TWELVE TABLES, CHARTS, AND GRAPHS

Scientific Method. 2. Design Study. 1. Ask Question. Questionnaire. Descriptive Research Study. 6: Share Findings. 1: Ask Question.

in children less than one year old. It is commonly divided into two categories, neonatal

Summary. Accessibility and utilisation of health services in Ghana 245

Kaplan-Meier Survival Analysis 1

Chapter 7 Probability. Example of a random circumstance. Random Circumstance. What does probability mean?? Goals in this chapter

cambodia Maternal, Newborn AND Child Health and Nutrition

Mid-year population estimates. Embargoed until: 20 July :30

The Normal Distribution

FOUR (4) FACTORS AFFECTING DENSITY

Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey

Your Name: Section: INTRODUCTION TO STATISTICAL REASONING Computer Lab Exercise #5 Analysis of Time of Death Data for Soldiers in Vietnam

Canada and Africa: A Contrast

JAPAN. Past trends. Scenario I

Projections of the Size and Composition of the U.S. Population: 2014 to 2060 Population Estimates and Projections

5.0 Provincial and Territorial Government Health Expenditure by Age and Sex

Population and Development

1.14 Life expectancy at birth

Data Analysis and Interpretation. Eleanor Howell, MS Manager, Data Dissemination Unit State Center for Health Statistics

Calculating Survival Probabilities Accepted for Publication in Journal of Legal Economics, 2009, Vol. 16(1), pp

ECONOMIC FACTORS AFFECTING COMPENSATION

Adverse Impact Ratio for Females (0/ 1) = 0 (5/ 17) = Adverse impact as defined by the 4/5ths rule was not found in the above data.

Challenges of the World Population in the 21st Century.

Part 4 Burden of disease: DALYs

bulletin 126 Healthy life expectancy in Australia: patterns and trends 1998 to 2012 Summary Bulletin 126 NOVEMBER 2014

LOGISTIC REGRESSION ANALYSIS

Statistical release P0302

Data Visualization. Data Visualisation telling your story in pictures

U.S. Population Projections: 2012 to 2060

New South Wales State and Regional Population Projections Release TRANSPORT AND POPULATION DATA CENTRE

Table of Contents. Florida Population Atlas 1

Lesson 3: Calculating Conditional Probabilities and Evaluating Independence Using Two-Way Tables

Q&A on methodology on HIV estimates

REVIEW UNIT 10: ECOLOGY SAMPLE QUESTIONS

Methodology Understanding the HIV estimates

Girls education the facts

Summary Measures (Ratio, Proportion, Rate) Marie Diener-West, PhD Johns Hopkins University

Biology 300 Homework assignment #1 Solutions. Assignment:

CALL FOR PAPERS JOHANNESBURG SOUTH AFRICA, NOV. 30 DEC 4, 2015 DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND IN AFRICA: PROSPECTS, OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES

It's Your Decision. How to Make an Advance Health Care Directive

Lecture 2 ESTIMATING THE SURVIVAL FUNCTION. One-sample nonparametric methods

FAMILY LIFE EDUCATION ACPS Fifth Grade

Tanzania: Population, Reproductive Health & Development. Photo credits: IFAD / Christine Nesbitt and Robert Grossman and USAID.

Measures of Prognosis. Sukon Kanchanaraksa, PhD Johns Hopkins University

chapter >> Making Decisions Section 2: Making How Much Decisions: The Role of Marginal Analysis

LONG TERM CARE INSURANCE IN ITALY

Now, observe again the 10 digits we use to represent numbers Notice that not only is each digit different from every other

Statistics fact sheet

A test your patients can trust.

Maternal & Child Mortality and Total Fertility Rates. Sample Registration System (SRS) Office of Registrar General, India 7th July 2011

Indicator 7: Mortality

Promoting Family Planning

Wendy Martinez, MPH, CPH County of San Diego, Maternal, Child & Adolescent Health

MEASURES OF VARIATION

Population Growth Activity Date Per

Transcription:

Demography Human Population Ecology A cemetery is an excellent place to study human demography. Demography is defined as "the study of the characteristics of human populations, such as size, growth, density, distribution and vital statistics". Gravestones record the dates of birth and death, which can be used to calculate death rates and draw survivorship curves. A survivorship curve is simply a graphical representation of the chance that an individual will survive from birth to a particular age. By comparing survivorship curves for different periods of time, we may look for historical trends in demography over the decades. Over the last few centuries, advances in health care and large scale global political conflict have left opposing marks on the demographics of our population. Two major time s stand out: before 1950 and after 1950. People who died before 1950 witnessed the industrial revolution, the ravaging effects of polio, as well as World Wars I and II. Following 1950, numerous vaccines and antibiotics were widely used, and with the exception of a few non global scale wars, this has been an era of relative peace in North America. What do you predict about how the demographics of the human population have changed during these two time periods? Demographics from local cemeteries can be used, but in order to get a broader scope of life in the US, the world wide web can be used to gather data about birth and death rates all over the country. Many cemeteries now have databases that list all individuals buried there. This is a much faster way than visiting all cemeteries in an area and making assumptions about the overall US population. Objectives: Once you have completed this lab, you will understand: 1. Some of the basic concepts of population demography 2. How factors such as advances in medicine and environmental protection may have affected human demography over the past 150 years 3. How human demography might change in the future, based on the current socio political reality and the presence of incurable diseases (such as AIDS) Hypotheses Write your answers to each question below before you start collecting data (use separate page) 1. In general, what are your predictions about death rates of people before or after 1950? 2. For infants of both sexes, would you expect infant mortality to be higher or lower before or after 1950? Why? 3. How might the survivorship of females differ from that of males in the 20 30 age group? (Why?) Methods Internet connection and cemetery database found at www.interment.net (collect from different sources). Alternately, you could use library resources, cemetery records, or records from city hall. Also see word document of this lab if you want to download and make adjustments. www.biologycorner.com/worksheets/demography_using_cemetery_data.html#.ultwwmttxy8 1/6

Data Table I Females who died before 1950 Females who died after 1950 Males who died before 1950 Males who died after 1950 www.biologycorner.com/worksheets/demography_using_cemetery_data.html#.ultwwmttxy8 2/6

www.biologycorner.com/worksheets/demography_using_cemetery_data.html#.ultwwmttxy8 3/6

Data Table II: Calculations of Survivorship and Mortality 1. To calculate the # alive, place your total number of deaths in the first row (0 9) of column B. This is the total number of people in your group upon which death took its toll as they grew older. 2. Subtract the number who died in each age (column A) from the number who were "alive" in your sample from the beginning of that age. Write this number in the next row in column B. Repeat to fill out column Sample Calculations Age Group # of deaths # alive 0 9 2 20 (what you start with) 4 18 (20 2) 1 14 (18 4) 2 13 (14 1) 3. Calculate the survivorship for each row in column C, divide the number in column B by the TOTAL you found at the bottom of column A. This gives you the fraction of people that survived to each age. By definition, the survivorship of the first age equals 1.0 (all living newborns have survived to that point) Females Who Died Before 1950 www.biologycorner.com/worksheets/demography_using_cemetery_data.html#.ultwwmttxy8 4/6

Females Who Died After 1950 Males Who Died Before 1950 Males Who Died After 1950 www.biologycorner.com/worksheets/demography_using_cemetery_data.html#.ultwwmttxy8 5/6

Data Analysis Make a graph of survivorship (Y axis) as a function of age group (X axis). Each data set should have its own line (one line for females who died before 1950, one line for females who died after 1950, one line for males who died before 1950, and a line for males who died after 1950. Use Create A Graph or another program to construct your graph. Hand drawn graphs are acceptable as long as they are neat and constructed on graph paper. 1. What is your interpretation of the juvenile (age 0 19) mortality pre and post 1950 for males and for females. List all factors that might account for any differences you see. 2. What is your interpretation of mortality for reproductive age adults (20 40) for pre and post 1950 for males and for females? List all factors that might account for any differences you see. 3. In Africa, AIDS takes its toll on the population, but deaths occur most frequently in the 20 40 age group. Show a survivorship curve that would illustrate this pattern. 4. What shifts in survivorship and mortality curves would you expect if significant cuts were made in social services such as prenatal and infant care? 5. Compare the two curves below: Which country is probably the better place to live? Defend your answer. www.biologycorner.com/worksheets/demography_using_cemetery_data.html#.ultwwmttxy8 6/6