---- Clip from: HDDFLASH ISSUE no. 4, July 1, 1996 ---------------------
Electronic newsletter and archiving service on human development issues
World Bank
Human Development Department (HDD)
e-mail: [log in to unmask]
http://www.worldbank.org/html/hcovp/hdd/contents.html
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GLOBAL BURDEN OF DISEASE AND INJURY SERIES
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"Global Burden of Disease and Injury Series," edited by Christopher J.L.
Murray and Alan D. Lopez
The series is published by the Harvard School of Public Health on behalf
of the World Bank and the World Health Organization and distributed
through Harvard University Press.
It describes a new approach to assessing the state of the world's health,
an approach that has generated global health data unprecedented in their
completeness, comparability and objectivity. To compile these data, over
100 researchers collaborated on the five-year Global Burden of Disease
Study (GBD). This series presents the GBDs updated fifth round of results.
The Global Burden of Disease (Volume I) provides an overview of the
methods and results of the GBD Study, presenting a portrait of the world's
health that is exceptional for its breadth, its level of detail, and its
technical rigor. While it minutely examines causes of death, the GBD is
unique among studies of health status in its inclusion of non-fatal health
outcomes. The resulting statistical tables and in-depth conclusions
provide illuminating information of interest to anyone concerned with the
health of populations.
Global Health Statistics (Volume II) provides useful epidemiological
statistics for 240 important sequelae included in the GBD. In this volume,
an encyclopedic set of tables presents internally consistent and
objectively determined estimates for widely used, standard epidemiological
measures: mortality, incidence, prevalence, duration, average age of
onset, and projections of deaths. These data are disaggregated in ten
age-sex groups and eight regions. Formatted for readers of English, French
or Spanish, this volume's succinctly presented data set is intended for
broad use. It should stand as an unparalleled desktop reference for
anyone interested in the patterns of disease within populations.
To order contact Harvard University Press: Tel: 617-495-2480
Fax: 617-495-8924 , Web order form: http://www.hup.harvard.edu
For more information:
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/organizations/bdu/bdu.html
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posted by Sam Lanfranco < [log in to unmask] >
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