I should take the cue from you and quit responding to him also. It never does any good as he always has a cite that doesn't match the discussion or is just plain wrong. That is going to make my personal ignore list grow to three.
Nobody ALWAYS does anything. This from another thread:
That poor infant mortality line is one of the most commonly fraudulent statements used by the proponents of socialized medicine to support it.
Evidently you couldn't be bothered, so I spent a few minutes doing some actual research. Here's what the WHO says about its own data:
http://www.who.int/healthinfo/statis...lmortality/en/
Quote:
Data sources
1. Neonatal mortality rates are calculated from birth and death data derived from vital registration or from household surveys:
Vital registration: The number of live births and number of neonatal deaths are used to calculate age specific rates.
Surveys: Calculations are based on birth history - a series of detailed questions on each child a woman has given birth to during her lifetime. The estimates are generally presented as period rates for the five-year periods preceding the survey. The total number of births in the survey provides the denominator.
"Household surveys?" Wow. That's a highly accurate method. Not.
Quote:
The reliability of the neonatal mortality estimates depends on accuracy and completeness of reporting and recording of births and deaths. Underreporting and misclassification are common, especially for deaths occurring early on in life.
So much for the validity of third-world reporting.
But what about industrialized countries?
These quotes are from an article by a Dr. Granted, it is on a blog, but anyone with minimal research skills should be able to ferret out the underlying data.
http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/the-doc...l-miscarriage/
Infant Mortality Comparisons a Statistical Miscarriage
by Dr. Linda Halderman
Quote:
According to the way statistics are calculated in Canada, Germany, and Austria, a premature baby weighing <500g is not considered a living child.But in the U.S., such very low birth weight babies are considered live births. The mortality rate of such babies — considered “unsalvageable” outside of the U.S. and therefore never alive — is extraordinarily high; up to 869 per 1,000 in the first month of life alone. This skews U.S. infant mortality statistics.
When Canada briefly registered an increased number of low weight babies previously omitted from statistical reporting, the infant mortality rose from 6.1 per 1,000 to 6.4 per thousand in just one year.
According to research done by Canada’s Bureau of Reproductive and Child Health, “Comparisons of infant mortality rates by place and time should be adjusted for the proportion of such live births, especially if the comparisons involve recent years.”
Norway boasts one of the lowest infant mortality rates in the world. But when the main determinant of mortality — weight at birth — is factored in, Norway has no better survival rates than the United States.
Quote:
Some of the countries reporting infant mortality rates lower than the U.S. classify babies as “stillborn” if they survive less than 24 hours whether or not such babies breathe, move, or have a beating heart at birth.
Forty percent of all infant deaths occur in the first 24 hours of life.
In the United States, all infants who show signs of life at birth (take a breath, move voluntarily, have a heartbeat) are considered alive.
If a child in Hong Kong or Japan is born alive but dies within the first 24 hours of birth, he or she is reported as a “miscarriage” and does not affect the country’s reported infant mortality rates.
The length of pregnancy considered “normal” is 37-41 weeks. In Belgium and France — in fact, in most European Union countries — any baby born before 26 weeks gestation is not considered alive and therefore does not “count” against reported infant mortality rates
Quote:
In Switzerland and other parts of Europe, a baby born who is less than 30 centimeters long is not counted as a live birth. Therefore, unlike in the U.S., such high-risk infants cannot affect Swiss infant mortality rates.
Efforts to salvage these tiny babies reflect this classification. Since 2000, 42 of the world’s 52 surviving babies weighing less than 400g (0.9 lbs.) were born in the United States.
The parents of these children may view socialized medicine somewhat differently than its proponents.
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