首页
登录
职称英语
Older Americans are less healthy than their English counterparts, but they li
Older Americans are less healthy than their English counterparts, but they li
游客
2023-12-22
82
管理
问题
Older Americans are less healthy than their English counterparts, but they live as long as or even longer than their English peers, according to a new study by researchers from the RAND Corporation and the Institute for Fiscal Studies in London. Researchers found that while Americans aged 55 to 64 have higher rates of chronic diseases than their peers in England; they died at about the same rate. And Americans age 65 and older—while still sicker than their English peers—had a lower death rate than similar people in England, according to findings published in the journal Demography.
The paper was co-authored by James Banks and Alastair Muriel of the Institute for Fiscal Studies and James P. Smith, distinguished chair in labor markets and demographic studies at RAND. "If you get sick at older ages, you will die sooner in England than in the United States," Smith said. "It appears that at least in terms of survival at older ages with chronic disease, the medical system in the United States may be better than the system in England. "
In the new study, researchers examined the prevalence of illness among those 55 to 64 and 70 to 80. They also looked for the first time at the onset of new illnesses in those age groups in the United States and England during the years spanning 2005 to 2009. Finally, researchers examined trends in death rates in each country.
The findings showed that both disease prevalence and the onset of new disease were higher among Americans for the illnesses studied—diabetes, high-blood pressure, heart disease, heart attack, stroke, chronic lung diseases and cancer. Researchers found that the higher prevalence of illness among Americans compared to the English that they previously found for those aged 55 to 64 was also apparent for those in their 70s. Diabetes rates were almost twice as high in the United States as in England (17.2 percent versus 10.4 percent) and cancer prevalence was more than twice as high in the United States (17.9 percent compared to 7.8 percent) for people in their 70s.
In spite of both higher prevalence and incidence of disease in America, death rates among Americans were about the same in the younger ages in this period of life and actually lower at older ages compared to the English. Researchers say there are two possible explanations why death rates are higher for English after age 65 as compared to Americans. One is that the illnesses studied result in higher mortality in England than in the United States. The second is that the English are diagnosed at a later stage in the disease process than Americans. "Both of these explanations imply that there is higher-quality medical care in the United States than in England, at least in the sense that these chronic illnesses are less likely to cause death among people living in the United States," Smith said.
"The United States’ health problem is not fundamentally a health care or insurance problem, at least at older ages," Banks said. "It is a problem of excess illness and the solution to that problem may lie outside the health care delivery system. The solution may be to alter lifestyles or other behaviors. " The study also investigated the relationship between the financial resources of individuals in both countries and how soon they would die in the future.
While poorer people are more likely to die sooner than their more well-off counterparts, researchers say their finding supports the view that the primary pathway between health and wealth is that poor health leads to a depletion of household wealth, rather than being poor causes one’s health to decline. Researchers found that the substantial changes in wealth that occurred in the years 1992 and 2002 in the United States through increases in stock prices and housing prices did not alter the probability of subsequent death. [br] In this passage, the word "prevalence" can be best paraphrased as " ______".
选项
A、that is generally observed
B、that is unique in human beings
C、that is specially chosen
D、that is roughly estimated
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3296816.html
相关试题推荐
[originaltext]WeallfindthatlearningEnglishtakeseffortanddedication.
[originaltext]WeallfindthatlearningEnglishtakeseffortanddedication.
Americansdonotgoinforenvy.Thegapbetweenrichandpoorisbiggertha
[originaltext]MorningeveryoneandwelcometotheEnglishforAcademicPurpo
[originaltext]MorningeveryoneandwelcometotheEnglishforAcademicPurpo
[originaltext]MorningeveryoneandwelcometotheEnglishforAcademicPurpo
Americanstodaydon’tplaceaveryhighvalueonintellect.Ourheroesareat
OurculturehascausedmostAmericanstoassumenotonlythatourlanguageis
OurculturehascausedmostAmericanstoassumenotonlythatourlanguageis
[originaltext]FewAmericansstayputforalifetime.Theymovefromtownto
随机试题
Duringtheearlyyearsofthiscentury,wheatwasseenastheverylifeblood
Ofalltheareasoflearningthemostimportantisthedevelopmentofattitu
Peoplethinkingabouttheoriginoflanguageforthefirsttimeusuallyarri
A. B. C. D.
铝合金门窗洞口墙体厚度方向的预埋铁件中心线,如设计无规定时,距内墙面:38~60
在编制施工组织设计时,()可根据需要划分工作,确定工作之间的逻辑关系和各工作的
A.充分必要条件 B.充分而非必要条件 C.必要而非充分条件 D.既不
分离外周血单个核细胞的方法是A.密度梯度离心法B.E花环沉降法C.免疫磁珠分离法
普通感冒的主要临床表现是()。A.喉炎症 B.肺泡炎症 C.胸膜炎症 D.
B
最新回复
(
0
)