Amanote Research
Register
Sign In
Validity of the Spanish Surname Infant Mortality Rate as a Health Status Indicator for the Mexican American Population.
American Journal of Public Health
- United States
doi 10.2105/ajph.74.9.998
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract
Available in
full text
Categories
Environmental
Public Health
Occupational Health
Date
September 1, 1984
Authors
M L Selby
E S Lee
D M Tuttle
H D Loe
Publisher
American Public Health Association
Related search
Infant Mortality Rate as an Indicator of Population Health
Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
Epidemiology
Public Health
Occupational Health
Environmental
Maternal Mortality Rate—A Reliable Indicator?
International Journal of Clinical Medicine
Native American Infant Mortality.
American Journal of Public Health
Environmental
Public Health
Occupational Health
Father’s Lifetime Socioeconomic Status, Small for Gestational Age Infants, and Infant Mortality: A Population-Based Study
Ethnicity and Disease
Medicine
Epidemiology
Reliability and Validity of the Reduced Spanish Version of the Iowa Infant Feeding Attitude Scale
Journal of Obstetric Gynecologic and Neonatal Nursing
Medicine
Pediatrics
Midwifery
Maternity
Critical Care Nursing
Inequalities of the Infant Mortality Rate and Poverty in Colombia
Value in Health
Medicine
Health Policy
Public Health
Occupational Health
Environmental
Research Evidence on the Validity of Risk-Adjusted Mortality Rate as a Measure of Hospital Quality of Care
Medical Care Research and Review
Medicine
Health Policy
Distribution and Population Status of the Spanish Slug in Zhytomyr
BIOLOGY & ECOLOGY
Studies in Spanish American Population History
HAHR - Hispanic American Historical Review
Cultural Studies
History