2014
DOI: 10.5455/ijmr.20141205032738
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The Epidemic of Non-communicable Diseases in Jamaica: Monsters Awoken from Lifestyle Practices

Abstract: Of the 57 million deaths that occurred in the world in 2008, 63 percent were due to chronic noncommunicable diseases (CNCDs), and the majority of those who died were women and elderly people. Objectives: To evaluate health indices of those in the retirement aged cohort and working aged cohort; to determine rates of comorbidity for those in the retirement aged and the working aged cohorts; to compute the prevalence rate of specific chronic non-communicable diseases and to calculate death rates for those in reti… Show more

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“…A study by Bourne et al [7] found that the mortality rate of Jamaicans 60+ years old is 58.64 per 100 of the mid-year population and that this was greater for females than for males. Another study by Bourne et al [32] revealed that in 2008, 49.9% of mortality were related to chronic non-communicale diseases (male, 44.4%; female, 57.1%) as well as that ageing is associated with ageing-related diseases like chronic conditions (i.e, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, cancers, arthritis). Those studies provided significant insights into the mortality rates of the current work, the feminization of deaths and also concurs with the current findings that deaths are feminized phenomenon in Jamaica.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A study by Bourne et al [7] found that the mortality rate of Jamaicans 60+ years old is 58.64 per 100 of the mid-year population and that this was greater for females than for males. Another study by Bourne et al [32] revealed that in 2008, 49.9% of mortality were related to chronic non-communicale diseases (male, 44.4%; female, 57.1%) as well as that ageing is associated with ageing-related diseases like chronic conditions (i.e, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, cancers, arthritis). Those studies provided significant insights into the mortality rates of the current work, the feminization of deaths and also concurs with the current findings that deaths are feminized phenomenon in Jamaica.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%