Provincial Mortality






Glossary

The indicators shown in this application are btained by processing annual death records. This mortality information is centralized by the Spanish National Institute of Statistics that provides the necessary files annually.

ICD:

International Classification of Diseases

Crude mortality rate:

The crude mortality rate is the proportion of people who die relative to the total population in a given period of time . It is usually expressed as the number of deaths per year per 100,000 people.

Age-Adjusted Rate:

The purpose of adjusting for age is to obtain mortality rates without an age effect in order to compare mortality between provinces with different demographic pyramids . It is a weighted average where the weights are obtained from the so-called "standard populations". The most commonly used populations are European and world populations.

Truncated rate

Adjusted mortality rate limited to 35-64 years old.

Accumulated Rate:

This indicator is a percentage that represents the risk of death from birth to age 75 provided that, there were no competing causes of death. It is also an indicator adjusted for age and comparable across provinces.

CMF (Mortality Comparative Figure)

It is the ratio of the age-adjusted rate in each province and the adjusted rate for all of Spain .

Distribution by age of global standards and European populations
Age Group World Population European Population
0-4120008000
5-9100007000
10-1490007000
15-1990007000
20-2480007000
25-2980007000
30-3460007000
35-3960007000
40-4460007000
45-4960007000
50-5450007000
55-5940006000
60-6440005000
65-6930004000
70-7420003000
75-7910002000
80-845001000
85+5001000
Total100000100000