26.
General fertility rate is the number of births per thousand women aged
A. 15 to 43.
B. 15 to 45.
C. 15 to 44.
D. 14
to 44.
27. Rate may be obtained by dividing the
number of birth to the mothers of each age by the number of females of that
age.
A.
Total fertility rate.
B. Age specific fertility.
C. Total fertility rate.
D. Standardized birth rate.
28. The
infant mortality is defined as the number of deaths of infants less than 1 year
of age registered in given year per 1000 live births registered
A. In the
preceding year.
B. In the mid
of the year.
C. In the
same year.
D. In the
following year.
29. GRR is obtained by dividing the number of
female births to the total number of births and multiplied by
A. CBR.
B. SDR.
C. TFR.
D. ASFR.
30. (i). All the present mothers would survive to
end of reproductive period.
(ii). The entire new born girl would attain the motherhood without
dying.
(iii). The fertility rate would remain unchanged throughout the child
bearing age.
The
above stated statements are the assumptions of
A. GRR.
B.
SDR.
C.
TFR.
D.
ASFR.
31. In
the calculation of NRR the factor of mortality is considered.
A. No
B. Yes.
C. Sometimes.
D. Depending upon situations.
32.Rate is obtained by multiplying the ASFR
(female only) at a given age by the chance of a female child surviving from
birth to the age group of mother and summing for all ages of the mother.
A. GRR.
B. NRR.
C. TFR.
D. ASFR.
33.The population will increase, remains
stationery or decreasing according to whether the NRR exceeds, equal or is less
than
A. Zero.
B. -1.
C. 2.
D. Unity.
34.
The term is used in which fertility has been nearly constant for a long
time and mortality has been falling.
A. Quasi-stable population.
B. Unstable population.
C. Stable population.
D. Target population.
35. A life history of a hypothetical
group or cohort of people as it is gradually diminished by deaths. The record
begins on the birth of each member and continues until all have died.
A. Anthropology.
B. Life
table.
C. Cohort history.
D. History table.
36. (a)
The cohort is closed against migration in and out.
(b)
People died at each age according to the fix schedule.
(c) The cohort originates from some standard
number of births, called radix of life table.
(d)
At each age deaths are evenly between one birth day and the next.
(e)
The cohort normally contains only one sex.
The above statements are assumption of
A. Life graph.
B. Population pyramid.
C. Life table.
D. Ogive.
37.
Life table can be constructed for sexes together but due to the
difference in the male and female mortality at most ages, it is better to treat
them separately.
A. False.
B.
True.
C.
True but sometimes possible.
D. False but sometimes possible.
38.
The main purpose of the life table is to
A. Measure mortality.
B. Measure fertility.
C. To measure the chance of birth.
D. To assists census staff.
39.
With reference to the year, there are two types of life tables.
Current (or period) life table and
A.
Social
(or distribution) life table.
B.
Cast
(or National) life table.
C.
Generation
(or cohort) life table.
D.
Industrial
( or economical) life table.
40. An index is obtained by dividing the number
of children in given age group in the actual population by the number of women
in the actual population who would have been in the reproductive age group when
these children were born and then by dividing this quotient by the
corresponding quotient in the life table stationary population.
A.
Vital index.
B. Social index.
C. Replacement index.
D. Birth index.
41. An
index gives a very simple measure of reproductively which can be used as an
approximation to NRR, when ASFR are not available. It requires only knowledge
of the population in age groups and suitable life table.
A.
Vital index.
B. Social index.
C. Replacement index.
D. Birth index.
42.
A replacement index less than one indicates a greater ratio of children
to the women in the actual population than in the stationary population and NRR
less than one is an increasing population .Similarly a replacement index
greater than one indicates a decreasing population.
A. False.
B.
True.
C.
True but sometimes possible.
D. False but sometimes possible.
43.
The difference between two rates i.e. birth rate and death rate
A. NRR.
B.
Rate of natural increase.
C.
Vital index.
D.
Survival rate
44.
Natural increase indicates
A. An
excess of deaths over births.
B. Higher mortality.
C.
Higher fertility.
D. An excess of births over deaths.
45. Generally death rates for white races are
lower than for black races, while the rates for yellow races
A. Are
intermediate.
B. Are same as
that of white races.
C. Are same as
that of black races.
D. Are to be
determined now.
46. The study of fertility differences between
specific population groups.
A. Fertility
variation.
B. Fertility
analysis.
C. Differential
growth.
D. Differential fertility.
47. The population estimates are general described
as being of three types.
Inter-censal estimates, Immediate
post-censal estimates and
A. Forecast.
B. Future estimates or population projections.
C. Extrapolation.
D.
Interpolation.
48. “The continues and permanent
, compulsory recording of the occurrence and characteristics of vital events
primarily for their value as legal documents as provided by law and secondarily
for their usefulness as source of statistics”
A. Regular
census.
B. KAP survey.
C. The
registration method.
D. Regular
survey.
49. For
all causes combined, female mortality in infancy and throughout life in most
countries is
A. Higher than
male mortality.
B. Equal to
male mortality.
C. Lower than male mortality.
D. Not equal to
male mortality
50. Surveys on the
knowledge of attitude and practice of family planning methods are called
A. Family
surveys
B. KAP surveys.
C. Pilot surveys
D. Statistical surveys.
26
|
C
|
27
|
B
|
28
|
C
|
29
|
C
|
30
|
A
|
31
|
B
|
32
|
B
|
33
|
D
|
34
|
A
|
35
|
B
|
36
|
C
|
37
|
B
|
38
|
A
|
39
|
C
|
40
|
C
|
41
|
C
|
42
|
A
|
43
|
B
|
44
|
D
|
45
|
A
|
46
|
D
|
47
|
B
|
48
|
C
|
49
|
C
|
50
|
B
|
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