Epidemiology
Descriptive Epidemiology Case Study
The United States has a growing diabetic population, some have called it an epidemic, due to many factors that have become normalized for the country's citizens. People eat an increasingly poor diet, do not exercise as they should and have jobs that grow more sedentary with each passing year. It is difficult to name a single factor that is more damaging, but it would seem that people in the United States are doing everything that they can to encourage diabetes mellitus instead of combat it.
The incidence of diabetes is increasing across the nation with few regions seeing a decrease. Type-II diabetes is most prevalent along the East Coast but looking at a state-by-state map of the diabetes population, the problem is growing throughout the country. The state with the largest population, California, also has the most diabetes cases. Nine percent of the population in California (4,084,074 people) have been diagnosed with some form of diabetes. However, this is not the state with the highest concentration of cases as a percentage of the whole population. That distinction goes to the states of Texas, Florida and Ohio which have a diabetes population that is 10% of the states total population. The Atlantic seaboard states have the highest amount of citizens with diabetes as a percentage of the total populations in those states.
Morbidity and mortality can be explained as the diseased individual vs. The expired individual. People who have diabetes have some factors that can be observed while they are going through the disease that can be classified as being either stable factors of the disease or ones that can be modified. The primary stable characteristic is that a person who has type-II diabetes is going to need some form of assistance to help them maintain their blood sugar. In a healthy individual, the pancreas creates and releases the proper amount of insulin needed to regulate the body's blood sugar needs; in the diseased individual...
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