Health & Population · Glossary
Mortality rate attributed to household and ambient air pollution, age-standardized, female (per 100,000 female population)
SH.STA.AIRP.FE.P5
Definition
Mortality rate attributed to household and ambient air pollution is the number of deaths attributable to the joint effects of household and ambient air pollution in a year per 100,000 population. The rates are age-standardized. Following diseases are taken into account: acute respiratory infections (estimated for all ages); cerebrovascular diseases in adults (estimated above 25 years); ischaemic heart diseases in adults (estimated above 25 years); chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in adults (estimated above 25 years); and lung cancer in adults (estimated above 25 years).
Methodology for Health & Population indicators
Health and population indicators come from national vital-registration systems, demographic and health surveys, and modeling by the UN Population Division and WHO. Mortality and morbidity estimates are often modeled rather than directly observed in lower-capacity statistical systems, which means some figures are interpolations between survey years. Life expectancy is a "period" measure based on current age-specific mortality, not a forecast of how long someone born today will actually live.
How to interpret
- Always check the unit and reporting year before comparing values across countries.
- NULL or "Not available" means the World Bank did not publish a value — we never estimate.
- Year-over-year changes can be driven by methodology updates, not just real economic shifts.
Related indicators in Health & Population
- Population ages 0-14 (% of total population)
- Net migration
- Population ages 65 and above (% of total population)
- Life expectancy at birth, total (years)
- Population, total
- Fertility rate, total (births per woman)
- Urban population (% of total population)
- Adolescent fertility rate (births per 1,000 women ages 15-19)