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

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Wembley 1962

[Report of the Medical Officer of Health for Wembley]

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CHAPTER I.
VITAL STATISTICS
1. The population of the Borough in mid-1962 was estimated
by the Registrar-General to be 124,900.
The census of April, 1961, reveals a figure of 124,892.
2. In 1962 there were recorded 1,742 live births, giving a crude
birth rate of 13.9 per thousand estimated population. The RegistrarGeneral
has provided boroughs with a comparability factor for this
calculation which takes into account the relative proportion of women
of child bearing age in the total community. When this factor of
1.02 is applied the standardised birth rate becomes 14.18, a more
realistic figure, the origin of which, however, must be remembered
when comparing it with past years.
3. The infantile mortality rate of 19.5 compares very favourably
with the national rate of 20.7 per thousand and this is often used as a
pointer to the adequacy of the services provided. This figure would
have seemed quite unattainable a few years ago and indicates the
advances in obstetrics and paediatrics which have become available in
the district in recent years.
4. The number of deaths totalled 1,288, giving a crude death
rate of 10.31 per thousand. The comparability factor when applied
produces a standardised death rate of 11.86, again well below the
national rate.

During the year there was a total of 69 deaths (60 male and 9 female) as compared with deaths from the same cause during the five preceding years:—

Male.Female.Total.
1961671380
1960571269
1959711182
195858765
1957541266

It is sad to see so many adolescents and school children persistently
smoking in the face of all the evidence of the tie-up between
cigarette smoking and lung cancer, and it is to be hoped that parents
will do their utmost to discourage their offspring in this, not only
by their good advice, but by their good example in not smoking
themselves.
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