Race differences in mortality provide important insight into the nature of large-scale disease in the capitalist society. These differences are not only large in size but also consistent with multiple causes of death, and it seems that evolution will evolve as society evolves. The relationship between social factors and the biological and physical factors of disease can be identified by racial comparison and causality patterns that apply to listed minority and majority groups. In addition, you can estimate the impact of exploitation as a key mediator of disease under capitalist social relations. This paper attempts to combine analysis of biomedical mechanisms with Marxist social theory to study social roots of racial differences.
Terms used to describe the changes in morbidity and mortality that occurs when society changes population, society, and economic structure. An example of a transition from a young high mortality epidemic pattern to a chronic disease based model, and an example of a low overall mortality pattern in the elderly. Transformation may also refer to changes in disease patterns within a group, such as changes in social distribution. An example of this is the transition from "rich diseases" in the early 20 th century to chronic diseases in developed countries to high incidence rates of people in low-income brackets in these rich societies.
Race differences in mortality provide important insight into the nature of large-scale disease in the capitalist society. These differences are not only large in size but also consistent with multiple causes of death, and it seems that evolution will evolve as society evolves. The relationship between social factors and the biological and physical factors of disease can be identified by racial comparison and causality patterns that apply to listed minority and majority groups. In addition, you can estimate the impact of exploitation as a key mediator of disease under capitalist social relations. This paper attempts to combine analysis of biomedical mechanisms with Marxist social theory to study social roots of racial differences.
Racial discrimination, society, and disease: investigation of social and biological mechanisms of discriminatory death