Effect on lifestyle on Non-communicable diseases

Cards (6)

    • Risk factors are linked to an increased rate of disease
    • They can be: lifestyle, substances in body or environment ( e.g asbestos)
  • Lifestyle factors can have local, national and global impacts:
    • Non-communicable diseases affected by diet are more common in developed countries because people have high income to buy these factors
    • Nationally, people from deprived areas more likely to smoke, poor diet, drink - incidence of cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes are higher in those areas
    • Individaul choices affect local incidence of disease
  • Some risk factors are dirrctly able to caue disease:
    • Smoking - cardiovascular disease, lung disease, lung cancer - damages walls of arteries and cells in lining of lungs
    • Obesity -T2 diabetes - making body less sensitive or resistant to insulin, hard to control concentration of glucose in blood
    • Alcohol - liver disease, damage brain function - damage nerve cells in brain, brain loses volume
    • Smoking and alcohol when pregnant - health issues for unborn baby
    • Carcinogens and ionising radiation - cancer
  • Diseases can be caused by interaction of factors:
    • Lack exercise and high fat diet - -> high blood pressure, high cholesterol - - > cardiovascular disease
  • Human cost of non-communicable diseases:
    • Millions of people die per year
    • Lower quality of life or shorter lifespan
    • Affects loved ones
  • Financial cost of non-communicable diseases:
    • Cost of global health services reasearch and treatment is large
    • Families may have to move or adapt home to help treat family member with disease
    • Death of family memeber with disease can reduce family income
    • Reduction in people able to work can affect country's economy