Adjust Age Accreditation

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A “standard” population distribution is used to adjust death and hospitalization rates. The age-adjusted rates are rates that would have existed if the population under study had the same age distribution as the “standard” population. Therefore, they are summary measures adjusted for differences in age distributions.
A “standard” population distribution is used to adjust death and hospitalization rates. The age-adjusted rates are rates that would have existed if the population under study had the same age distribution as the “standard” population. Therefore, they are summary measures adjusted for differences in age distributions.
A “standard” population distribution is used to adjust death and hospitalization rates. The age-adjusted rates are rates that would have existed if the population under study had the same age distribution as the “standard” population. Therefore, they are summary measures adjusted for differences in age distributions.
An alternate way to compute the age-adjusted death rate by the direct method is simply to multiply the age- specific death rates by the corresponding proportion of the standard population in that age group and then sum these products across all 10 age groups.
rate. ... adjusted rate a fictitious summary rate statistically adjusted to remove the effect of a variable, such as age or sex, to permit unbiased comparison between groups having different compositions with respect to these variables. See also crude rate and specific rate.
An age-specific rate is calculated by dividing the total number of health events for the specific age-group of interest in the total population in that age group.
Adjustment is accomplished by first multiplying the age-specific rates of disease by age-specific weights. The weights used in the age-adjustment of cancer data are the proportion of the 1970 US population within each age group. The weighted rates are then summed across the age groups to give the age-adjusted rate.
Age standardisation. ... The standardisation by age occurs most often because the information is usually available and the age is important for the most health problems. Use: Age standardisations based on a standard population are often used at cancer registries to compare morbidity or mortality rates.
Definition. The age-standardized mortality rate is a weighted average of the age-specific mortality rates per 100,000 persons, where the weights are the proportions of persons in the corresponding age groups of the WHO standard population. Associated terms. None. Data sources.
To calculate the age-standardized mortality rate (ASMR), we must first calculate the age-specific (mortality) rates for each age group by dividing the number of deaths by the respective population, and then multiplying the resulting number by 100,000: Age-specific rate, 0 to 39 years.
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