Thursday, June 24, 2021

banking services chronicle reasoning book

 banking services chronicle reasoning book 


banking services chronicle reasoning book  Published this article  In June 2017 the British medical journal The Lancet published a review of the prevalence of diabetes in 15 states of India. This study by a group of medical practitioners funded by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) had worrying numbers. It found that while some 7 per cent people in India (based on 15 states data) had diabetes the prevalence of pre-diabetes (early signs particularly elevated blood sugar levels) was a staggering 10-15 per cent depending on the criterion used. This is no small health burden on a developing country. Their conclusion is we are undergoing an epidemiological transition. States/UTs with higher GDP— Gujarat Maharashtra Tamil Nadu and Chandigarh— have a higher prevalence of this disease than Bihar or Jharkhand. Delhi and Goa with high income levels are still awaiting sampling. Rural areas have lower diabetes rates than urban. But most worryingly the study finds that the poor in well-off urban states have higher incidence of diabetes than the rich in the same cities. In other words the rich in rich cities have started to learn good food habits. banking services chronicle reasoning book

banking services chronicle reasoning book  

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