Identify the risk factors for heart disease, stroke, and diabetes. Are there differences in rates among ethnic, racial, and socioeconomic groups? Explain your answer.
Identify other diseases for which men are at high risk. What puts them in this category?
Are there differences in rates among ethnic, racial, and socioeconomic groups?
Socioeconomic status :
Of course socioeconomic status is well related to health. People who belong higher socioeconomic group are less affected due to their sophisticated lifestyle and better health care when compared to lower socioeconomic group people who are more likely to suffer from various diseases , cancers , ulcers, premature ageing , infections , occupational diseases, stress all these may be due to poor income and low education .
Rate of diseases is higher in low socioeconomic groups.
Race:
race influences health. Like explained in attached images different race are affected .
Ethnic:
Non hispanic whites and blacks are more affected with hear disease than hispanics. Hispanics are more affected with stroke than non hispanics
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Identify the risk factors for heart disease, stroke, and diabetes. Are there differences in rates among...
Identify the risk factors for heart disease, stroke, and diabetes. Are there differences in rates among ethnic, racial, and socioeconomic groups? Explain your answer. Identify other diseases for which men are at high risk. What puts them in this category?
List risk factors for coronary heart disease, and identify possible interrealtionships among the factors. For example, a woman over 55 years of age is also at risk for diabetes; a person with diabetes is more likely to have hypertension.
questions 1-6 550 Capstone Cases (co CAPSTONE CASE B: CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE By Steven T. Fleming Cardiovascular disease is one of the leading causes of death in most developed countries. The Framingham study and many others have contributed to a rich literature linking a number of risk factors, such as obesity, high cholesterol, and smoking, to this disease. "Each year the American Heart Association (AHA), in conjunction with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, and...
Incidence and prevalence rates can also be used to compare the rates of disease across different settings (places), people, or time. We therefore need measures of comparison. The ratio of two measures of disease frequency is called the relative risk. The difference between two measures of disease frequency is called the risk difference, or rate difference. In some cases, it involves a measure in an exposed group (or groups) and a measure in an unexposed or comparison group. In other...
CAPSTONE CASsE B: CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE whis Wha 8y Steven T. Fleing 7 Out the Cardiovascolar dsease is one of the leading causes of death in m developed countries. The Framingham study sand many others he contributed to a rich literature linking a number of eisk tactors, suh as obesity, high cholesterol, and smoking, to this disease, "Each the American Heart Association (AHA), in conjunction with the C for Disease Control and Preventlon, the National Institutes of Heaith and other government...
camille has a strong family history of heart disease. what risk factors are important for her to be aware for her to be aware of. In your own response describe risk factors and also identify which can be modified which of the followin g is a characteristic of type 1 diabetes
Joe, a 65-year-old man, is at a high risk for heart disease. He has several risk factors: old age, type 1 diabetes, high blood pressure, smoker, family history of heart disease, overweight, inactive, and has low HDL cholesterol and high LDL cholesterol levels. Therefore, Joe thinks that heart disease is inevitable and there’s nothing he can do. Of his listed risk factors, which ones does he actually have control overand what actions can he take to possibly change his fate?
Extra credit: Janc, a 55-year-old woman, is at a high risk for heart disease. She has several risk factors: old age, type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, family history of heart disease, overweight, inactive, and has low HDL cholesterol and high LDL cholesterol levels. Therefore, Jane thinks that heart disease is inevitable and there's nothing he can do. Of her listed risk factors, which one does the actually have control over and what actions can she take to possibly change...
Could IGFR be a major effector in diseases other than diabetes and heart disease? If So, Which? How? Please answer question in essay form
QUESTION 11 What is the number one cause of death in America? 1. O 1.Heart Disease O 2. Cancer O3. Stroke O 4. Diabetes QUESTION 12 Which of the following risk factors is most commonly associated with chronic disease? 1.Unhealthy diet O2. Exercise O3. Polypharmacy 4. Moderate alcohol use QUESTION 13 How do chronic diseases such as COPD impact the healthcare burden in the US? 1.Reduction in insurance premium cost QUESTION 9 1.00 Most screening programs are named by the...