다국어인구학사전입니다. 여러분들의 많은 이용바랍니다. The Demopaedia team will be present at the next International Population Conference in Busan.
If you attend the conference, please, come to our oral communication which will be held on Tuesday August 27, from 15:30 to 17:00 (Bexco, room 213). The new Korean dictionary will also be presented in a side meeting organized by the Planned Population Federation of Korea (PPFK) on "Population Issues & Official development assistance" (open to all) at 19:00 (Bexco, room 110).

다국어인구학사전, 두 번째 통합본, 한국어판

42

Demopædia
Eunyoung Shim (토론 | 기여)님의 2013년 5월 3일 (금) 16:56 판 (새 문서: <!--'''42'''--> {{CurrentStatus}} {{Unmodified edition II}} {{Summary}} __NOTOC__ === 420 === The study of {{TextTerm|morbidity|1|420}} deals with the investigation of {{TextTerm|...)
(차이) ← 이전 판 | 최신판 (차이) | 다음 판 → (차이)
이동: 둘러보기, 검색


Panneau travaux.png 주 의
보고계신 다국어인구학사전은 현재 작업 중에 있습니다.
자세한 내용은 토론부분에서 확인해주세요.


여기로: Demopædia 소개 | 사전이용법 | 다운로드
장: 서문 | 1. 일반개념 | 2. 인구통계 | 3. 인구분포와 분류 | 4. 건강과 사망력 | 5. 혼인력 | 6. 출산력 | 7. 인구성장과 재생산 | 8. 인구이동 | 9. 인구학의 사회경제적 특성
페이지: 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 60 | 61 | 62 | 63 | 70 | 71 | 72 | 73 | 80 | 81 | 90 | 91 | 92 | 93
색인: 전체 색인 | 1장 색인 | 2장 색인 | 3장 색인 | 4장 색인 | 5장 색인 | 6장 색인 | 7장 색인 | 8장 색인 | 9장 색인


420

The study of morbidity1 deals with the investigation of illness2, sickness2, ill-health2 or disease2 in a population. Two aspects are considered: the incidence of disease3 and the prevalence of disease4 according to whether the new cases of disease5 are considered or the number of cases existing at one point in time. The compilation of morbidity statistics6 is hampered by the lack of a sharp distinction between health and the morbid state7. Nosology8 and nosography9 contribute respectively to the classification and description of diseases.

  • 2. Disease, illness, or sickness are used as collective nouns in the singular, or both in the singular or plural to designate specific ailments.

421

Health statistics1 encompass morbidity statistics, but also cover all aspects of the health of a population, and are generally taken to include statistics of cause-specific mortality2. The classification of deaths by cause of death3 is made difficult because in many cases there may not be a single cause of death4 but multiple causes of death5 or joint causes of death5. When this is the case we may distinguish between the immediate cause of death6 and the underlying cause of death7 or, looking at the problem from a different point of view, we may distinguish between the primary cause of death8 or principal cause of death8 and the secondary cause of death9, contributory cause of death9 or associated cause of death9. The cause-specific death rate10 is generally expressed per 100,000 population. The ratio of the number of deaths from a specific cause to the number of deaths from all causes is referred to as the cause-specific death ratio11.

422

Death or disability (426-2) may be the consequence of disease (420-2) or of injury1 or poisoning2. Injuries may be due to accident3 or violence4. Among cases of violence it is normal to distinguish suicides5 and attempted suicides5, homicides6 and deaths or injuries due to operations of war7.

  • 3. Accident, n. - accidental, adj.
  • 4. Violence, n. - violent, adj.
  • 6. Homicide, n.: May in law be murder or manslaughter.
  • 7. Abbreviated to war deaths and war injuries.

423

An endemic disease1 is one that permanently affects substantial segments of a population, in contrast with an epidemic2, which spreads and then disappears within a fairly short time; when it appears in a large number of countries, it is called a pandemic3. Certain infectious diseases4 or communicable diseases4 have attracted particular attention, because they are capable of infecting large numbers of persons within relatively short time intervals. In such instances we speak of epidemic diseases5, and special epidemiological statistics6 are collected to show their incidence. It is possible to obtain information about these illnesses in various countries because legislation has made their reporting compulsory; they are therefore called notifiable diseases7. A distinction is sometimes made between chronic diseases8 and acute diseases9. These terms are not precisely defined, but acute diseases are generally understood to be those of abrupt onset and short duration while chronic diseases are those with slow onset and long duration, and often causing prolonged disability.

  • 2. Epidemic, n., also used as adj.
  • 4. Infectious, adj. - infect, v. - infection, n. The terms communicable diseases, contagious diseases and infectious diseases are not synonymous. A contagious disease can only be transmitted from person to person; thus, malaria, a communicable disease, is not contagious. Moreover, certain infectious diseases are not communicable.
  • 6. Epidemiology, n.: the science dealing with epidemics - epidemiologist, n.: a specialist in epidemiology - epidemiological, adj.: pertaining to epidemiology. The meaning of these terms has expanded greatly, and epidemiology now covers the study of relations between a biological or medical phenomenon and various factors, such as tobacco for example in "the epidemiology of lung cancer," or alternatively the statistical analysis of geographic variations in health phenomena.

424

Demographers devote particular attention to certain aspects of mortality: endogenous mortality1 which results from the genetic constitution of the individual, congenital malformations2, injuries connected with birth, or degenerative diseases associated with aging; exogenous mortality3, in contrast, results from external causes such as infectious or parasitic diseases and accidental injuries other than those incurred by the child during birth. Also of special interest are diseases connected with pregnancy, labor and the puerperium4. Mortality from these latter diseases is called maternal mortality5, and a maternal death rate6 may be computed as the ratio of maternal deaths in a year to the births of the same year. The proportion of deaths due to senility7 has mostly drawn interest as an index of poor reporting of causes of death.

1 and 3. Infant mortality (410-1) can thus be decomposed into endogenous infant mortality and exogenous infant mortality.

  • 4. The puerperium is the lying-in period following a birth, and the mortality of mothers during the period is called puerperal mortality.
  • 7. Senility n. - senile, adj.

425

Three aspects of morbidity (420-1) are commonly measured by morbidity rates1 or morbidity ratios1: frequency, duration and severity. These indices may be computed for specific diseases, or for all diseases. Two indices of the frequency of ill-health are the incidence rate2, the number of new cases of disease during the period related to the average population, and the prevalence rate3, the number of cases existing at a given moment of time expressed per unit of the average population. Either the average duration per case4, or the disability rate5, which is the mean number of days of illness5 per person in the population, may serve as a measure of the duration of illness. The case fatality rate6, which is the proportion of fatal cases among the reported cases of the specified diseases, may be used as an index of severity.

  • 6. This is said to measure the lethality of the disease.

426

An impairment1 refers to any physical, functional or psychological defect, which results from illness, injury or congenital malformation. When an impairment inhibits an individual’s ability to work or participate in normal activities it is referred to as incapacity2 or disability2. This may be total or partial; in either case, permanent disability3 or infirmity4 refer to an irreversible condition. The probability that a healthy individual aged exactly x years will become disabled in the next year or over the course of some number of years starting with this exact age, is called the risk of disability5 or the probability of disability5. A series of these probabilities can be combined into a disability table6, which is a specialized extension of the life table (cf. §432).

* * *

여기로: Demopædia 소개 | 사전이용법 | 다운로드
장: 서문 | 1. 일반개념 | 2. 인구통계 | 3. 인구분포와 분류 | 4. 건강과 사망력 | 5. 혼인력 | 6. 출산력 | 7. 인구성장과 재생산 | 8. 인구이동 | 9. 인구학의 사회경제적 특성
페이지: 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 60 | 61 | 62 | 63 | 70 | 71 | 72 | 73 | 80 | 81 | 90 | 91 | 92 | 93
색인: 전체 색인 | 1장 색인 | 2장 색인 | 3장 색인 | 4장 색인 | 5장 색인 | 6장 색인 | 7장 색인 | 8장 색인 | 9장 색인