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Philippines Statistical Yearbook 2012

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General Info
Geography 
Coverage type 
Country
Time period covered 
01/1976 - 12/2010
Series or system 
Philippines Statistical Yearbook
Data type
Report:
  • Subnationally representative
  • Urban-rural representative
Summary 

The Philippine Statistical Yearbook (PSY) is an annual publication of the National Statistical Information Center of the National Statistical Coordination Board. Data are sourced from surveys, censuses, administrative data, and multiple government agencies. The subjects covered include: population and housing, income and prices, economic accounts, environment and natural resources, agriculture, industry, trade, tourism, vital statistics, health and nutrition statistics, education, labor and employment, social services, transportation and communcation, energy and water resources, public administration and governance, banking and finance, crime and justice, and science and technology. 

Keywords 
Acute glomerulonephritis, Adult mortality, Aged adults, Agriculture, Assets, Beds, Birth asphyxia, Birth control pills, Birth weight, COPD, Cancers, Cardiovascular and circulatory diseases, Causes of morbidity, Child anthropometry, Child mortality, Childhood sexual violence, Children, Cholera, Climate, Climate change, Community health clinics, Condoms, Congenital anomalies, Contraceptives, Cooking fuels, Crime, Crops, Death certificates, Dengue, Dentists, Diabetes, Diarrhea, Diarrheal diseases, Diphtheria, Disability, Disasters, Domestic violence, Economic indicators, Education, Education degrees, Education expenditures, Electricity, Employment, Encephalitis, Ethnicity, Fertility, Fever, Fishing, Food contamination, GDP, GNI, Gonococcal infections, Government expenditures, Government health expenditures, HIV and AIDS, Hearing loss, Heart disease, Hepatitis, Hospitals, Household air pollution, Household expenditures, Housing conditions, Housing materials, Hypertension, IUDs, Idiopathic intellectual disability, Illicit drug use, Income, Infant mortality, Infectious diseases, Influenza, Infrastructure, Injectable contraceptives, Injuries, Institutionalized population, International migration, Internet, Intimate partner violence, Land ownership, Leprosy, Life expectancy, Lighting, Literacy, Live births, Livestock, Loans, Lower respiratory infections, Lymphatic filariasis, Malaria, Malnutrition, Manufacturing, Marital status, Mass media, Maternal conditions, Maternal mortality, Maternal sepsis, Measles, Medical education, Meningococcal meningitis, Mining, Mortality, Nurses, Organized violence, Overnutrition, Paralysis, Particulate matter, Personal health expenditures, Pharmacies, Physicians, Pneumococcal pneumonia, Polio, Population, Population density, Postpartum amenorrhea, Poverty, Preterm birth complications, Prices, Private health facilities, Public health facilities, Public social assistance, Rabies, Rainfall, Religion, Respiratory infections, Road traffic injuries, Roads, Sanitation, Schistosomiasis, School conditions, School enrollment, Schools, Sexual sterilization, Sexual violence, Skilled birth attendants, Stillbirths, Syphilis, Taxes, Teachers, Telecommunications, Telephones, Tetanus, Tourism, Traditional birth control, Training programs, Tuberculosis, Typhoid and paratyphoid fevers, Unemployment, Unintentional injuries, Urban ambient air pollution, Urinary tract infections, Varicella, Vision loss, Vital statistics, Waste disposal, Water supply, Whooping cough