Georgia - Mortality rate, adult, female (per 1,000 female adults)

The value for Mortality rate, adult, female (per 1,000 female adults) in Georgia was 75.50 as of 2020. As the graph below shows, over the past 60 years this indicator reached a maximum value of 145.74 in 1960 and a minimum value of 75.50 in 2020.

Definition: Adult mortality rate, female, is the probability of dying between the ages of 15 and 60--that is, the probability of a 15-year-old female dying before reaching age 60, if subject to age-specific mortality rates of the specified year between those ages.

Source: (1) United Nations Population Division. World Population Prospects: 2019 Revision. (2) University of California, Berkeley, and Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research. The Human Mortality Database.

See also:

Year Value
1960 145.74
1961 141.03
1962 136.31
1963 132.59
1964 128.87
1965 125.15
1966 121.43
1967 117.71
1968 115.34
1969 112.98
1970 110.61
1971 108.24
1972 105.87
1973 103.15
1974 100.42
1975 97.70
1976 94.97
1977 92.24
1978 92.63
1979 93.01
1980 93.40
1981 93.78
1982 94.16
1983 92.86
1984 91.55
1985 90.24
1986 88.94
1987 87.63
1988 86.91
1989 86.20
1990 85.49
1991 84.77
1992 84.06
1993 87.92
1994 91.77
1995 95.63
1996 99.48
1997 103.34
1998 102.72
1999 102.11
2000 101.49
2001 100.87
2002 100.26
2003 99.35
2004 98.43
2005 97.52
2006 96.61
2007 95.70
2008 93.67
2009 91.65
2010 89.63
2011 87.60
2012 85.58
2013 84.08
2014 82.59
2015 81.09
2016 79.59
2017 78.10
2018 77.23
2019 76.36
2020 75.50

Development Relevance: Mortality rates for different age groups (infants, children, and adults) and overall mortality indicators (life expectancy at birth or survival to a given age) are important indicators of health status in a country. Because data on the incidence and prevalence of diseases are frequently unavailable, mortality rates are often used to identify vulnerable populations. And they are among the indicators most frequently used to compare socioeconomic development across countries.

Limitations and Exceptions: Data from United Nations Population Division's World Populaton Prospects are originally 5-year period data and the presented are linearly interpolated by the World Bank for annual series. Therefore they may not reflect real events as much as observed data.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: The main sources of mortality data are vital registration systems and direct or indirect estimates based on sample surveys or censuses. A "complete" vital registration system - covering at least 90 percent of vital events in the population - is the best source of age-specific mortality data. Where reliable age-specific mortality data are available, life tables can be constructed from age-specific mortality data, and adult mortality rates can be calculated from life tables.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual

Classification

Topic: Health Indicators

Sub-Topic: Mortality