TABLE III. Cases of specified notifiable diseases, United States, weeks ending TABLE III. (Cont'd.) Cases of specified notifiable diseases, United States, weeks ending April 23, 1988 and April 25, 1987 (16th Week) *For measles only, imported cases includes both out-of-state and international importations. N: Not notifiable U: Unavailable *International $Out-of-state TABLE III. (Cont'd.) Cases of specified notifiable diseases, United States, weeks ending April 23, 1988 and April 25, 1987 (16th Week) W.N. CENTRAL Minn. lowa Mo. N. Dak. S. Dak. Nebr. Kans. 193 272 307 13 36 10 37222 MO 956 1,111 17 2 120 3241 3548 21 24 13 8 8 88སླ་སླ 3སྐསླ་ 3ཉ་སྒྱུ 8ཎྜ 13 5 32 8 16 85 3 28 20 28 109 49 32 28 158 33 14 92 74 Idaho "Mortality data in this table are voluntarily reported from 121 cities in the United states, most of which have populations of 100,000 or more. A death is reported by the place of its occurrence and by the week that the death certificate was filed. Fetal deaths are not included. **Pneumonia and influenza. †Because of changes in reporting methods in these 3 Pennsylvania cities, these numbers are partial counts for the current week Complete counts will be available in 4 to 6 weeks. Total includes unknown ages. Data not available. Figures are estimates based on average of past available 4 weeks. Cause of Mortality (ICD, 9th Revision) TABLE V. Estimated years of potential life lost (YPLL) before age 65* and causespecific mortality, by cause of death United States, 1986 *For details of calculation, see footnotes to Table V, MMWR 1988;37:45. 'Cause-specific mortality rates as reported in the National Center for Health Statistics' Monthly Vital Statistics Report are compiled from a 10% sample of all deaths. Equivalent to accidents and adverse effects. "Category derived from disorders relating to short gestation and respiratory distress syndrome. **Reflects CDC surveillance data. |