Query Results for Mortality Data by NM Small Areas - Count
Query Result Page Options
This option remembers your currently selected filtering criteria and display
options and applies
( ) to all subseqent dataset query requests.
This feature can help you save time and be consistent by automatically applying
your defined selections to other queryable datasets you open.
Restrictions/conditions:
- This features only effects queryable datasets loaded after the apply criteria feature is enabled.
- When a new queryable dataset is loaded, this features does NOT clean/clear any of that dataset's default selected values - it simply supplements the newly loaded dataset's selections with those values captured when the apply criteria feature was enabled.
- When in the builder interface you can override and make additional changes (select or deselect).
- Changes made in the builder interface are not automatically saved to the enabled apply criteria definition. However, once you have a result you can reapply the current critera by using this dialog and pressing the "Reapply" button. If you do not see this button then the apply criteria feature has not been enabled.
- Selections are applied according to what selections are available within that given queryable dataset. For example if your apply criteria is set for years 1999-2015 and the dataset does not have 1999 then only years 2000-2015 will be selected.
- This feature is available immediately and does not require any user login account. However, if you wish to save this definition you will need to have either a free self registered user account or a secure DOH account and be logged in to be able to save your definitions.
- TURNING OFF: These selections will remain in effect for the length of your current session on this site. It is turned off by pressing the "Clear" button.
- TECHNICAL NOTE: The selection's internal dimension names and values MUST match. In some instances a value's title shown to the user will look the same as the dataset's but it is stored internally with a different name or value so they do not match and thus will not be selected. As an end user there is nothing that can be done about this situation because this is something the dataset author must setup. If you see something like this please contact us and report this issue.
One Example:
Doing studies on different datasets like you want to look at different survey datasets for hispanic females for years 2015-2018. You want to always display a county choropleth map and a horizontal bar chart. You make those initial selections, submit your selections, enable this apply criteria feature. From then on, those selections are automatically applied (as much as possible) to all subsequent queryable datasets you open.You are not logged in. To save a query you must be logged in. Enter your username / password to proceed.
Once successfully logged in you will be redirected back to
this page where you will then need to press the Save
Query Defintion button again.
Unauthorized access is strictly prohibited and subject to
full prosecution. In using this account you agree to the
department's full terms and conditions.
See the Introduction to My Selections page for more information.
Query Criteria
Measure Description: | |
---|---|
Data Grouped By: | NM Small Areas |
Data Notes
Deaths of Despair
Deaths of despair, also known as deaths from diseases of despair, include deaths from suicide, drug overdose and 100% alcohol-attributable causes. Note that deaths that are 100% attributable to alcohol do not include all alcohol-related deaths. For instance, motor vehicle crashes and liver cirrhosis are often, but not always, attributable to alcohol and are not included in this definition of "deaths of despair."ICD-Codes
ICD Stands for International Classification of Diseases. It is a coding system maintained by the World Health Organization and the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics used to classify causes of death and diagnoses, injury causes, and medical procedures for hospital and emergency department visits. The U.S. is currently using the 10th revision (ICD-10). For list of ICD codes used in NM-IBIS, please visit [https://ibis.doh.nm.gov/view/html/MortICDlists.htm].NM-IBIS Map Guidance
For guidance on NM-IBIS map categories, please visit the [[a href="./resource/MapChoroClasses.html" IBIS map guidance page]].New Mexico Residents
Results include deaths of New Mexico residents, including those whose death occurred outside of New Mexico. Results do not include non-residents who died in New Mexico.Small Area Queries and Reference Maps
All data queries by New Mexico Small Area include New Mexico resident deaths, only. For Small Area reference maps, please visit: [https://ibis.doh.nm.gov/resource/SmallAreaMethods.html].U.S. Data
Comparable data for the U.S. and other states may be found on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Wide-ranging ONline Data for Epidemiologic Research (CDC WONDER) website, [https://wonder.cdc.gov].
Data Sources
New Mexico Death Data: Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics (BVRHS), Epidemiology and Response Division, New Mexico Department of Health.(https://www.nmhealth.org/about/erd/bvrhs/vrp/)
Data Issues
New Mexico Small Areas
Locating a data record in a New Mexico Small Area required geocoding (assigning latitude and longitude to) the residential address for each health event (birth, death, cancer incidence, etc.). Sometimes health events, especially those with addresses such as P.O boxes or rural routes, could not be assigned to a small area. Excluding these records from the small area analysis introduces bias (underestimates of counts and rates) into the results. This was more likely to occur in rural areas of the state (where P.O. boxes and rural routes are more common), but may have occurred in any of the 109 small areas. For more information on the New Mexico Small Area Methodology, please visit the [[a href="/nmibis-view/resource/SmallAreaMethods.html" Small Area Methods]] page.Death Certificate Data
Death certificate information is submitted electronically by funeral directors, who obtain demographic information from an informant, a close family member of the decedent. The NMDOH Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics (BVRHS) does annual trainings for funeral directors and local registrars and the death certificate information goes through extensive scrutiny for completeness and consistency. The cause of death is certified by the decedent's physician or the physician that attended the death. Accidental and suspicious deaths are certified by the Office of the Medical Investigator. When death certificates are received the cause of death literals are keyed into software locally by the BVRHS, then shipped to the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) where they are machine coded into ICD-10 cause-of-death codes. NCHS returns the ICD-10 codes to BVRHS where the death records are updated.