London's Pulse: Medical Officer of Health reports 1848-1972

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Greenwich 1956

[Report of the Medical Officer of Health for Greenwich Borough.

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19
During the year the pattern of death registrations continued
normally, namely that the first quarter produced the most (33.6%)
and the third quarter the least (19.8%).
It will be observed from the following table that during 1956
the deaths occurring at 65 years and upwards accounted for 66.5%
of the total compared with a figure of 22.8% for 1901.

Deaths in the age group 0-5 years show an even more striking comparison : in 1901 the deaths in this group amounted to 37.4% whilst the figure for the current year is 2.9%.

Age Group190119111921193119511956
Under 1 year of age362306175972920
Between 1 and 5 years187158803975
Between 5 and 15 years64675822107
Between 15 and 25 years66606765124
Between 25 and 65 years454474466382311257
65 years and over335356387529633581
Totals1,4681,4211,2431,1341,002874

MATERNAL MORTALITY
There were no deaths from Puerperal Sepsis or other Maternal
causes during the current year, a similar position to that recorded
for each of the previous three years.
Three deaths were registered for the year 1952 and the corresponding
figures for 1951, 1950, 1949 and 1948 were 4, 0, 1 and 2
respectively.
INFANTILE MORTALITY
The Infantile Mortality Rate, measured by the deaths of
children under one year of age to the number of live births registered,
was 15.07 per thousand live births as compared with 16.01 for last
year and 22.79, the average for the previous ten years, For the
County of London the rate was 21.4 and for England and WaJcs
23.8 per 1,000 related live births.
The present Borough figure of 15.07 is 6.33 lower than that for
London and shows a decrease of 0.94 from that returned for the
previous year and is only 0.45 greater than the rate for 1952, viz.
14.62, the lowest figure ever recorded for Greenwich.