Eyeballs can blister and eyelids seal up, and life expectancy can be significantly reduced. |
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In other words, Indian life expectancy improved, both absolutely and relative to that for non-Indians. |
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The wearable device allows people to monitor smoke and project the damage passive smoking can do to their heart, lungs and life expectancy. |
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It is a mistake to suppose that the actuarial figure for life expectancy will be the actual length of life for any particular individual. |
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Differences in life expectancy between socioeconomic groups have widened, mainly as a result of faster rates of improvement in affluent groups. |
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They are now of an age that exceeds the average life expectancy in the countries where they live. |
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In addition, the life expectancy for women in 16 of the 27 countries studied has gone down. |
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One of the most remarkable achievements of modern industrial capitalism is the increase in life expectancy. |
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Advances in medicine are increasing life expectancy and diseases which are dread killers today will be curable tomorrow. |
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In-flight medical emergencies are likely to increase as air travel continues to expand and life expectancy lengthens. |
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A dramatic improvement in health status is anticipated with life expectancy going beyond current forecasts. |
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Each page through a printer or copier takes another bit of ink off the ribbon, or another copy off of the machine's life expectancy. |
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Greater life expectancy and faster than expected growth in wage bills have added to fund costs. |
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Which leads me to wonder if the life expectancy of the average blog might not be rather short. |
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It's the risks relevant to the place where you currently live that affect your life expectancy while living there. |
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By inviting children to holiday in Ireland it is said to increase their life expectancy by two years. |
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A baby girl born today has an average life expectancy that will span the rest of this century. |
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With the trees only having a natural life expectancy of around 60 years they had to be removed. |
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It seems that she is just a natural extension of the life expectancy of the love song. |
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At the time of transition the note had a life expectancy of just six months compared to the coin's 100 years. |
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Children's lives worldwide are improving, in terms of their life expectancy and general health. |
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Their little boy is permanently dependent on oxygen and also has a shortened life expectancy. |
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Towards the end of 1944 the life expectancy of prisoners was limited to an average of a few months. |
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Forecasts suggest that by next year the average life expectancy could be three years. |
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That means the average life expectancy for a coach at the club is around nine months. |
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Women in the city fall short of the average of 80.6 years with a life expectancy of 77.3 years. |
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The average life expectancy of a Glasgow man is 68.7, a decade less than men in Dorset. |
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One in five adults is HIV positive and the average life expectancy at birth is just under 49 years. |
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Average life expectancy has sunk dramatically and young people have been robbed of any chance to find a reasonable job. |
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More than 80 percent of its population is literate, and life expectancy is over 70 years. |
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This was a world of short life expectancy, poor nutrition and daily conflict with the ruling authority and nature. |
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Second, lump sum payments are worked out on the basis of an assumed life expectancy. |
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As baby boomers age and life expectancy rises, dementia threatens to become epidemic. |
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To qualify for the study, participants had to have a life expectancy of six months or less and have terminal cancer or heart disease. |
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The only way to live is to shack up with losers whose natural life expectancy isn't much more than a mayfly on a good day. |
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When we began, life expectancy and trade-in value of some competitive machines were at an unacceptably low level. |
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Salt water and wet bilges will expedite the deterioration, although 10-15 years is a reasonable life expectancy. |
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Until recently, biometrics was the science of statistically evaluating various aspects of life expectancy. |
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Obesity is associated with multiple morbid conditions and a loss in life expectancy. |
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Only one person in seven suffering from morbid obesity will live to his or her full life expectancy. |
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Infant and child mortality have dropped sharply, and life expectancy has risen considerably. |
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The child mortality rate has more than doubled in the past decade and the average life expectancy at birth is just 58 years. |
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It was a Sisyphean task of epic proportions that defied a normal life expectancy. |
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If they don't slim down by age 20, their life expectancy will drop by up to 20 years. |
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Until the 1930s, the life expectancy of a baby with the disease was only a few months. |
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People who are lower in the hierarchy tend to have worse health and shorter life expectancy. |
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I returned home to cheering news from Kingster, who had kindly e-mailed to let me know just how limited my life expectancy is. |
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The drugs are not a panacea but they do improve quality of life and boost life expectancy. |
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However, heavy drinkers have shortened life expectancy as a result of accidents and diseases, including liver cirrhosis. |
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The authors also cautioned that low infant mortality and longer life expectancy tend to increase the incidence and prevalence of cancer. |
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The death rate and infant mortality have declined, and life expectancy has increased. |
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This was because the missed cases were not typical of the cohort as a whole but comprised a subset with a lower life expectancy. |
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This was the era of plague, typhus, malaria, high infant and maternal mortality, and low life expectancy. |
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Assembled with aftermarket steel cranks and connecting rods, these engines have exceptional life expectancy. |
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We have a declining birth rate and increased life expectancy, along with a marked reluctance to pay into a private pension plan. |
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Damages are notionally intended to be such as will exhaust the fund, contemporaneously with the termination of the plaintiff's life expectancy. |
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The average life expectancy, for example, rose in China much more than it did in India. |
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Heart failure is a deadly serious condition, but with good treatments people can double or triple their life expectancy. |
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I must say Amsterdam is a great place, but my life expectancy would spectacularly diminish if I stayed there. |
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In malarial zones, by contrast, the life expectancy at birth was only 22.5 years. |
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Corrections officers commit suicide at alarmingly high rates and their average life expectancy is fifty-eight years. |
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The average life expectancy is five years and there is a risk he might not come out of the operation but he told us and the doctors that he was up for it. |
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The average life expectancy of men and women showed a big difference. |
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Its life expectancy is the lowest in America and lower than those of Guatemala or Pakistan. |
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These have shown that tamoxifen alone is inadequate treatment and should be given only to very frail women with a life expectancy of less than a year. |
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In Afghanistan, the United States has contributed to increasing life expectancy from 44 years to 61 years. |
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So you didn't know what you were going to get, what you were going to meet, and it was no wonder that the life expectancy of a subaltern in those days was about 10 weeks. |
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In the wild, cheetahs have a life expectancy of 10 to 12 years, according to National Geographic. |
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On average, Maori life expectancy is 10 years less than that of Pakeha. |
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Patients expressed a continuing need for hope even when they knew and accepted that they were in the terminal stages of disease and had a limited life expectancy. |
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These projections are based on assumptions about fertility and life expectancy as both these measures are independent of the age structure of the population. |
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I tell myself not to feel bad because my life expectancy is eighty-six, which means I have nineteen more years of life. |
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Hospice services are provided for patients with a predicted life expectancy of 6 months or less who have elected palliative rather than curative care. |
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Because of higher air pollution, the life expectancy of a person born in the city in 2014, is four years fewer than in the suburbs. |
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The UNDP stated that in 2006 life expectancy in Lesotho was estimated at 42 years for men and women. |
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Across the European Union, air pollution is estimated to reduce life expectancy by almost nine months. |
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Infant mortality is double the national average, and life expectancy is slightly lower than in other parts of the district. |
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We know that as a group, pakeha people in New Zealand enjoy good health and that the average life expectancy is steadily increasing. |
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Like all loopers, Joe knows his life expectancy is finite and one day he will close the loop by gunning down his future self. |
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It can be argued that it is better to compare life expectancy of the period after childhood to get a better handle on life span. |
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Australia has the third and seventh highest life expectancy of males and females respectively in the world. |
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The life expectancy of Indigenous Australians is difficult to quantify accurately. |
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Two estimates of Indigenous life expectancy in 2008 differed by as much as five years. |
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After the socialist revolution, the life expectancy for all age groups went up. |
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These improvements continued into the 1960s, when the life expectancy in the Soviet Union surpassed that of the United States. |
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The life expectancy at birth was 74 years in 2013, or 72 years for males and 76 years for females. |
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Santa Catarina boasts Brazil's highest average life expectancy and lowest homicide rate in addition to lower levels of corruption. |
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According to The World Factbook, Macau has the fourth highest life expectancy in the world. |
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According to a report by the BBC, life expectancy is 67 years for men and 71 years for women. |
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Since 1981, the Galician life expectancy has increased by five years, thanks to a higher quality of life. |
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During the 1980s, health statistics, including life expectancy and causes of mortality, were gradually made available to the outside world. |
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According to Virola, the Philippines continues to lag behind in terms of employment rate, tourism, life expectancy, and cellular subscriptions. |
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The life expectancy for Barbados residents as of 2011 Barbados and Japan have the highest per capita occurrences of centenarians in the world. |
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Cities also experience a wide range of life expectancy based on neighborhood breakdowns. |
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In United States cities such as Cincinnati, the life expectancy gap between low income and high income neighborhoods touches 20 years. |
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For example, in the United Kingdom, life expectancy in the wealthiest and richest areas is several years higher than in the poorest areas. |
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A 2013 study found a pronounced relationship between economic inequality and life expectancy. |
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This is one way that occupation can have a major effect on life expectancy. |
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Also, data from the UK shows the gap in life expectancy between men and women decreasing in later life. |
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This is no longer the case, and female human life expectancy is considerably higher than that of males. |
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The seriously mentally ill have a 10 to 25 year reduction in life expectancy. |
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Support for the theory has been bolstered by several new studies linking lower basal metabolic rate to increased life expectancy. |
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The life expectancy and demography of wild animals are often estimated by capturing, marking, and recapturing them. |
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Period life expectancy remains a commonly used statistic to summarize the current health status of a population. |
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Disparities in life expectancy are often cited as demonstrating the need for better medical care or increased social support. |
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As life expectancy was short, their numbers had to be continually replenished. |
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Within South Asia, the country ranks first in gender equality, second in foreign exchange earnings and third in life expectancy and peacefulness. |
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It has a very high Human Development Index ranking and the world's longest life expectancy. |
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A country scores higher HDI when the life expectancy at birth is longer, the education period is longer, and the income per capita is higher. |
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It is ranked highly in education, healthcare, life expectancy, quality of life, personal safety, and housing. |
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Life expectancy in Singapore is 80 for males and 85 for females, placing the country 4th in the world for life expectancy. |
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The life expectancy of men is reported to be 56 years and for women 60 years. |
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Until about 1750, in large part due to malnutrition, life expectancy in France was about 35 years and about 40 years in Britain. |
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Red squirrels that survive their first winter have a life expectancy of 3 years. |
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Since 1960, life expectancy has, in line with the European average, grown by two months per year. |
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In the 1840s there were no adequate sanitary facilities or water supply and life expectancy was low. |
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France performs well in international rankings of education, health care, life expectancy, and human development. |
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Average life expectancy at birth is 78 years for men and 85 years for women, one of the highest of the European Union. |
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Italy has a very high level of human development and it is sixth in the world for life expectancy. |
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Life expectancy in Italy is 80 for males and 85 for females, placing the country 6th in the world for life expectancy. |
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Its population enjoys the highest life expectancy and the third lowest infant mortality rate in the world. |
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In the developing world, urbanization does not translate into a significant increase in life expectancy. |
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European hedgehogs may live to ten years of age, although the average life expectancy is three years. |
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Yet it was not among the region's top performers in improving school enrollment and life expectancy. |
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Individuals often outlive their life expectancy by quite a lot, he says. |
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And a new Norwegian study shows just how powerful an effect on life expectancy exercise can have. |
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You've beaten the life expectancy by quite a bit, I'd wager, with or without your time-honored tubbiness. |
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In contrast, hypotension has no long-term adverse effects and is, in fact, associated with a longer life expectancy. |
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The celebrity chef visits the Greek island of Ikaria, where life expectancy is an average of 10 years more than America or the rest of Europe. |
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An obvious counterexample to his anti-modern contrarianism is the steady uptick in life expectancy. |
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Nuclear families have become smaller as childbearing has declined, but extended families have become larger as life expectancy grows. |
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They were shocked when they found out that IPF was progressive and incurable lung disease with a life expectancy of only three years. |
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Until about 1750, in large part due to malnutrition, life expectancy in France was about 35 years, and only slightly higher in Britain. |
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During the Industrial Revolution, the life expectancy of children increased dramatically. |
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Residents of Virginia's 8th congressional district share the longest average life expectancy rate in the nation, over 83 years. |
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There had been improvements in all four countries in life expectancy and in rates of mortality amenable to health care. |
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Forecasting life expectancy and mortality forms an important subdivision of demography. |
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But for those who survive early hazards, a life expectancy of 60 or 70 would not be uncommon. |
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An analysis published in 2011 in The Lancet attributes Japanese life expectancy to equal opportunities and public health as well as diet. |
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In many instances, life expectancy varied considerably according to class and gender. |
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Public health measures are credited with much of the recent increase in life expectancy. |
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The impact of AIDS on life expectancy is particularly notable in many African countries. |
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By harnessing the genetic makeup of mole rats, whose genes have a high resistance to runway cell growth, humanity will be able to eradicate cancer and extend life expectancy. |
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In April 1917, during a brief period of German aerial supremacy a British pilot's average life expectancy was 93 flying hours, or about three weeks of active service. |
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Telomere length is considered a biomarker of aging, with shorter telomeres associated with a decreased life expectancy and increased rates of chronic disease development. |
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Lumsden recommended that patients with intermittent claudication only undergo angioplasty or bypass surgery, provided the disease is unifocal and life expectancy is favorable. |
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The vast majority of these slaves went to sugar colonies in the Caribbean and to Brazil, where life expectancy was short and the numbers had to be continually replenished. |
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Under ideal conditions in its native range, Norway maple may live up to 250 years, but often has a much shorter life expectancy in North America, sometimes only 60 years. |
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It adds to life expectancy, destresses and helps give positive vibes. |
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Also known as floppy baby syndrome, the genetic condition leaves children with little control of their movements and can drastically shorten life expectancy. |
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The life expectancy in Bahrain is 73 for males and 76 for females. |
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Thus, such life expectancy figures need to be adjusted for temporal trends before calculating how long a currently living individual of a particular age is expected to live. |
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There are great variations in life expectancy between different parts of the world, mostly caused by differences in public health, medical care, and diet. |
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Theatrical, photographic, and projection lamps may have a useful life of only a few hours, trading life expectancy for high output in a compact form. |
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According to The World Factbook, Macau has the fourth highest life expectancy in the world, while its infant mortality rate ranks among the lowest in the world. |
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The rich cultural traditions shared by all Sri Lankan cultures is the basis of the country's long life expectancy, advanced health standards and high literacy rate. |
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The HDI is a composite of life expectancy, income, and level of education. |
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If individuals are deterred from seeking testing they may delay treatment which is critical in prolonging life expectancy and reducing infectiousness. |
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Its median age is higher than the global average due to its low birth rate, high life expectancy, and relatively high rate of emigration among younger people. |
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Gordian incorporates innovative methods for estimating life expectancy, as well as life years gainable for the individual by making recommended lifestyle changes. |
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It also ranks high in life expectancy and in safe drinking water. |
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There is a popular belief that soldiers have a significantly longer life expectancy in a combat zone after they have survived their first few firefights. |
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The average life expectancy in the 18th century was 35 years. |
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According to the South African Institute of Race Relations, the life expectancy in 2009 was 71 years for a white South African and 48 years for a black South African. |
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Various ways in which modern First World countries are often determined include GDP, GNP, literacy rates, life expectancy, and the Human Development Index. |
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The average life expectancy of a cuttlefish is about one to two years. |
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It estimates and seeks to explain the number of people who were alive during the Medieval period, population trends, life expectancy, family structure, and related issues. |
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They feel that poverty reduces confidence and life expectancy and that people born in poor conditions have difficulty escaping their disadvantaged circumstances. |
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South Shore, Blackpool, has lowest life expectancy at 66 years for men. |
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The organization also publishes the UN Human Development Index, a comparative measure ranking countries by poverty, literacy, education, life expectancy, and other factors. |
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He said that this is the case because it compares swimming pools to the wild ocean and extrapolates the survival rates of calves to life expectancy in adulthood. |
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At the time, doctors gave him a life expectancy of two years. |
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Research by the National Institute of Economic and Social Research found that an independent Scotland could delay these increases, due to a lower life expectancy. |
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