[13] In 2009 - 2011, the age - adjusted cardiovascular
disease death rate for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people was 1.3 times as high as that for non-Indigenous people.
[15] Between 1981 and 2011, the cardiovascular
disease death rate for males fell by 71 percent — a 4.2 percent average annual decline.
For one, in his conclusions he only used data from a small portion of the countries where data was available on fat consumption vs heart
disease death rate.
Residents of the Philippines, Malaysia, and tropical nations had the highest heart
disease death rate due to eating too much saturated fat, the researchers said.
Sir Roger says Mr Lansley had never bothered to visit him until a fortnight ago, despite his success in halving heart -
disease death rates and slashing waiting times in the past decade, with minimal involvement by the private sector.
Between 2003 and 2006, cardiovascular
disease death rates were about 1.7 times higher among adults diagnosed with diabetes than those who were not, according to the CDC's 2014 National Diabetes Statistics Report.
Vaccine - preventable
disease death rates decreased since 1980.
The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW) estimates that if cardiovascular
disease death rates had remained at their 1968 peak, there would have been 190,223 deaths for cardiovascular disease in 2011 — more, in fact, than the number of deaths from all causes in that year.
Not exact matches
«The [
death]
rate increased 0.9 % for heart
disease, 2.7 % for chronic lower respiratory
diseases, 6.7 % for unintentional injuries, 3.0 % for stroke, 15.7 % for Alzheimer's
disease, 1.9 % for diabetes, 1.5 % for kidney
disease, and 2.3 % for suicide.
The decision comes on the heels of a new report from the National Center for Health Statistics, an agency of the Centers For
Disease Control and Prevention, that shows the
rate of estimated drug overdose
deaths increased in the third quarter of 2016 and outpaced the
rate of drug - related
deaths over the same period in 2015.
, the British medical historian Thomas McKeown carefully chronicles the decline in mortality in England and Wales over much of the 19th and 20th centuries — charting
death rates for infectious
diseases ranging from diphtheria to pneumonia.
The global health community and a coalition of public - private initiatives has successfully begun taming the scourge, with a 21 % decrease in its global incidence and 29 % drop in mortality
rate between 2010 and 2015; still, there were 212 million malaria cases worldwide and nearly 430,000
deaths from the
disease in 2015, according to the latest World Health Organization (WHO) figures.
Higher
rates of
death and cardiovascular
disease were seen among those with high sodium intake, defined as higher than 6,000 mg a day.
Apparently your God liked more babies dying but science had a heart and now birth mortality
rates are higher than they have ever been in human history with fewer
diseases and complications causing baby
deaths.
Now, maybe it isn't God's will for Christians to have lower
disease rates, lower
death rates, lower accident
rates, lower food poisoning
rates, lower child injury
rates, and higher job promotion
rates.
Case and Deaton highlight the finding that overall mortality
rates for middle - aged white Americans have increased in recent years due to
deaths from self - destructive behavior: suicide, drug and alcohol overdose, and
disease resulting from long - term alcohol abuse.
Its concentration of the monounsaturated fat, oleic acid, is linked to a reduction in cardiovascular
disease including related stroke and
death rates (14).
In modern day Sri Lanka, Cardiovascular
Disease (CVD) is the leading cause of
death among adults, and coconut oil is usually implicated as a reason for this high
rate of CVD.
Vegetarian diets have been linked with reductions in risk for several chronic
diseases, including hypertension, but a new study has claimed that they are also associated with reduced
death rates.
Babies who are breastfed have lower
rates of sudden infant
death syndrome (SIDS), diabetes, and other serious health conditions, while breastfeeding mothers have lower
rates of postpartum depression, cardiovascular
disease, diabetes, and hypertension.
When infants are not optimally breastfed they are at risk for increased illness such as higher
rates of gastrointestinal and respiratory infections, allergies, cancer, obesity, cardiovascular
disease and diabetes and even
death.
Animal studies have demonstrated that the
death rate among animals with
disease decreases when the body temperature is elevated.
It's hard being a parent and having to watch what your child has to go thru to develop a strong, healthy immune system... Again research has shown that the
death rate of animals infected with
disease is higher when their body temperature is lowered.
Increase in non-communicable
diseases has an awful lot to do with the increase in life expectancy due to reduced
death rates from contagious
disease.
During emergency situations,
disease and
death rates among babies and children are higher than for any other age group; and the younger the child, the higher the risk, leaving babies under six months most vulnerable.
Breastfeeding has a major impact on
rates of
disease and
death, particularly in developing countries.
After the AAP first published guidelines on safe infant sleep habits in 1992, the SIDS
rate dropped over 50 percent from 1.2
deaths per 1,000 live births that year to 0.57
deaths per 1,000 live births in 2001, according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
Approximately 175000 cancer cases are diagnosed annually in children younger than age 15 years worldwide, 1 with an annual increase of around 0.9 % in incidence
rate in the developed world, only partly explained by improved diagnosis and reporting.1, 2 Childhood cancer is rare and its survival
rate has increased significantly over the years owing to advancement in treatment technologies; however, it is still a leading cause of
death among children and adolescents in developed countries, ranking second among children aged 1 to 14 years in the United States, surpassed only by accidents.1, 3 Childhood cancer is also emerging as a major cause of
death in the last few years in Asia, Central and South America, Northwest Africa, and the Middle East, where
death rates from preventable communicable
diseases are declining.2
Breast cancer survival
rates have increased, and the number of
deaths associated with this
disease is steadily declining, largely due to factors such as earlier detection, a new personalized approach to treatment and a better understanding of the
disease.
But according to the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control, accidental
death rates dropped among all age groups in 2009, the latest year for which data is available — except among babies younger than 1 year.
During emergency situations,
disease and
death rates among under - five children are higher than for any other age group; the younger the infant the higher the risk.
Sir Roger said Mr Lansley only visited him for the first time two weeks ago, despite a slashing of the
death rate for heart
disease by 50 % and reduced waiting times with a minimum of private sector involvement.
As tobacco use continued to cause avoidable misery, addiction,
disease and early
deaths, the smoking
rate among adults and children fell to unprecedented lows.
That
death rate increased 435 % on Staten Island between 2000 and 2011, according to city statistics in a Centers for
Disease Control report.
«The Community Health Status Report shows Dutchess County making continued improvement in driving down the
rates of
death and hospitalization from chronic
diseases, including heart
disease, the nation's number one killer,» said DBCH Commissioner Henry M. Kurban, MD, MBA, MPH, FACPM.
According to the OECD, the UK
rates as follows in 2005 (only data I have access to), I've included data from the US since you've used them in your post and Germany and France as a comparison with two randomly picked (read: I saw them in the list) European countries:
Death from heart
disease per 100,000 population (23 listed): 13th 49.3; France 2nd 22.5, Germany 12th 48.3; US 7th 40.3; Japan 1st 18.4; Hungary 23rd 71.7
Death from cancer per 100,000 population (24 listed): 18th 175.6; France 15th 166.2; Germany 11th 161.2; US 10th 159.8; Mexico 1st 96.8; Hungary 24th 242.0 Data from the ONS for 2005 (most recent report I could find) shows:
Death from cancer per 100,000 population (19 listed): 8th 216.9; Germany 4th 215.3; Cyprus 1st 149.6; Hungary 19th 330.8
Death from heart
disease per 100,000 population (19 listed): 10th 141.5; Germany 8th 150.4; Portugal 1st 71.9; Lithuania 19th 490.6
Smoking
rates have dropped in recent years, but cigarettes remain the leading cause of preventable
disease and
death in the U.S., and electronic cigarettes pose a new danger, says Dr. Leslie Kohman, professor of surgery and director of outreach for the Upstate Cancer Center.
That has helped to boost
rates of cardiovascular
disease and other health effects of such air pollution, a problem that combined with the health effects of air pollution from industrial coal burning that costs China roughly $ 66 billion dollars per year and causes 760,000 premature
deaths, according to a World Bank report.
Starved and water - stressed trees are more susceptible to
disease and insect activity and have a higher
rate of
death, said Marvin Brown, a former state forester of Oregon and Missouri who was not involved in the assessment.
This represents a small but steady increase since the beginning of this century; between 2000 - 2004
death rates from the
disease were 7.6 per 100,000 men and 5.0 per 100,000 women.
«Cold weather, fewer sun hours are associated with increased
rates of alcoholic cirrhosis: Alcoholic cirrhosis is a
disease which causes nearly half a million
deaths every year.»
In addition, some patient groups and members of Congress have recently asked why AIDS receives disproportionately far more than
diseases with higher
death rates, such as heart
disease and Alzheimer's.
Although the actual absolute numbers have increased when compared with 2009 (the year for which there are World Health Organization mortality data for most EU countries) due to the growing numbers of elderly people, the
rate (age - standardised per 100,000 of the population) of people who die from the
disease has declined from 148.3 male and 89.1 female
deaths per 100,000 in 2009 to 138.1
deaths and 84.7 per 100,000 predicted for 2014.
The
death rate from tuberculosis, malaria, and other non-HIV infectious
diseases will also decline.
Fewer Hispanics than whites die from the 10 leading causes of
death, but Hispanics had higher
death rates than whites from diabetes and chronic liver
disease and cirrhosis.
Pancreatic cancer is a leading cause of cancer
death and can be considered a global lethal
disease because incidence and mortality
rates are nearly identical.
Deaths from heart
disease and stroke are declining overall in Europe, but at differing
rates, according to research, published online in the European Heart Journal.
Researchers warn that hospital admissions and
deaths caused by liver
disease are likely to rise if cases of type 2 diabetes continue to increase at current
rates.
More people in the U.S. are living with heart
disease today, compared with decades ago, even though
rates of
death due to heart
disease have gone down.
Tuberculosis reached epidemic proportions, and infant mortality
rates quadrupled, with acute respiratory
diseases accounting for 50 percent of the
deaths.