The transport of 15 November 1943 consisted mainly of men and women in the "working age". Of the 1149 deportees there were 14 children under 15, 485 men between 15-50 years, 526 women aged 15-50 and 124 persons over 50 years. Eventually, 32 men and 6 women survived this transport.
No selection was made on arrival on 18 November 1943 at Auschwitz-Birkenau; all were registered on arrival and then the whole transport went into "quarantine" for six weeks, although some groups were immediately used for forced labor. In January 1944 various selections were held in which the remaining men were divided over the coal mines of Janina, Jawischowitz and Fürstengrube and various labor commands in Auschwitz_Birkenau, while only a few of the remaining women, after the quarantine and the selections, were employed in Auschwitz Birkenau too.
Witnesses have stated that many women have died in the first weeks of their stay in Auschwitz-Birkenau as a result of typhus, dysentery and other diseases. Perhaps, the date of death may be determined individually for a few. The exact date on which women with children were selected for the gas chambers cannot be determined.
Further statements show that only five women survived the selections of January 1944, on which it is concluded that all other women (and also children) have died by 31 January 1944 at the latest due to illness, exhaustion or gasification or otherwise.
Source: resolver.kb.nl/resolve?urn=urn:gvn:EVDO02:NIOD05_8414&role=pdf. Auschwitz part IV: the deportation transports in 1943, edition of the Dutch Red Cross of 30 October 1953. Parts of that text concerning the transport of 15-11-1943 have been shortened by the editors of the Jewish Monument.