Illness and death May 14, 1963: The jail of Zaire is even more difficult and humiliating than the peace corps office booklet. It was sent here to help isolate and treat locals and wild animals. When I got over the beauty of plants, I could not help thinking about a lot of insects and mosquitoes that the environment can support ... After a 5 hour bus entered the forest, we opened the open space I came to a gathering of wasteful production and movement. It is a building.
Hypertensive diseases include (1) essential (primary) hypertension, (2) hypertensive heart disease, (3) hypertensive nephropathy and (4) hypertensive heart disease and kidney disease. Between 1999 and 2004, African-American men, Caucasian men, and African-American women increased hypertension mortality, whereas African-American men showed the largest increase. Throughout this period, African-American men and women have hypertension mortality (Figure 2). This is more than twice as many as white men.
Cardiovascular diseases such as coronary heart disease, heart failure, stroke or hypertension are indicated. The death of the cardiovascular system is more common in men than in women (male age-adjusted age-adjusted mortality rate is 266.1 years, women are 182.1 years), nonhispanic African-American women are non-Hispanic black Americans It tends to have a higher mortality rate. In addition, non-Hispanic black American women have higher age-adjusted mortality rates for coronary heart disease than non-Hispanic white women or Hispanic women.
¿ 1/2 of cardiac disease In 1950, the mortality rate of black and white coronary heart disease was comparable, but by 2000 the death rate of blacks and whites was 30% higher than white people ( Figure 1). Heart disease mortality rates in the two ethnic groups decreased significantly from 1950 to 2000, but white (57%) fell faster than black (45%), so the relative and absolute racial differences in 2000 were In contrast, the mortality rate of black cancer has increased and the mortality rate in 2000 was 40% higher than in 1950. Over time, both ethnic groups increased the mortality of lung and ovarian cancer, while colorectal cancer, breast cancer and prostate cancer had significantly increased mortality, while whites stabilized or decreased.
Social Roots of Racial Differences Health policies in the social realm are far from traditional health policies and can have a decisive impact on health.