نتایج جستجو برای: rural urban differences

تعداد نتایج: 851676  

2017
M Helbich V Blüml T de Jong P L Plener M-P Kwan N D Kapusta

BACKGROUND Urban-rural disparities in suicide mortality have received considerable attention. Varying conceptualizations of urbanity may contribute to the conflicting findings. This ecological study on Germany assessed how and to what extent urban-rural suicide associations are affected by 14 different urban-rural indicators. METHODS Indicators were based on continuous or k-means classified p...

2015
Mesbah Fathy Sharaf Ahmed Shoukry Rashad

There is substantial evidence that on average, urban children have better health outcomes than rural children. This paper investigates the underlying factors that account for the regional disparities in child malnutrition in three Arab countries, namely; Egypt, Jordan, and Yemen. We use data on a nationally representative sample from the most recent rounds of the Demographic and Health Survey. ...

2015
Nisar Ahmad Muhammad Ramzan Sheikh

The rural urban food consumption patterns are estimated and compared in Pakistan in the present study. The Household Integrated Economic Survey (HIEs), 1998-99 data published by the Federal Bureau of Statistics, Islamabad is used. The rural urban food consumption analysis at household level is carried out by dividing the households into five income groups at national and provincial levels. The ...

2000
H.C. Ganguli

Fifteen epidemiological studies on psychiatric morbidity in India have been analysed. National all-India prevalence rates for 'all mental disorders' and five specific disorders have been worked out The national prevalence rates for 'all mental disorders' arrived at are 70.5 (rural), 73 (urban) and 73 (rural + urban) per 1000 population. Prevalence of schizophrenia is 2.5/1000 and this seems to ...

2008
Albert Park

share of income inequality.1 In part, today’s rural–urban gap reflects the institutional legacies of socialism. Beginning in the 1950s, Communist Party leaders clearly separated urban and rural residents through a strictly enforced residential permit (hukou) system (see chapter 3), establishing urban and industrial development as the main objective of economic planning. Urban workers were provi...

Journal: :Journal of epidemiology and community health 1984
N Poulter K T Khaw B E Hopwood M Mugambi W S Peart G Rose P S Sever

As part of a longitudinal study of migrants who move from a subsistence farming rural society to Nairobi, blood pressures and associated factors were measured in cross sectional studies of members of the Luo tribe in their traditional rural environment and in the urban environment of Nairobi. Blood pressures in Nairobi correlated with duration of urban residence. In the rural area men showed a ...

Journal: :Journal of psychoactive drugs 2008
James A Hall Douglas C Smith Scott D Easton Hyonggin An Julie K Williams Susan H Godley Mijin Jang

This study compared the characteristics and treatment outcomes of rural adolescents with urban adolescents in substance abuse treatment programs in CSAT's Strengthening Communities for Youth (SCY) initiative. Using data from ten SCY programs nationally, the authors classified adolescents as rural or urban using Rural-Urban Commuting Area (RUCA) codes. We then evaluated changes in substance use ...

Journal: :BMC Public Health 2007
Gareth O'Reilly Dermot O' Reilly Michael Rosato Sheelah Connolly

BACKGROUND From a public health perspective and for the appropriate allocation of resources it is important to understand the differences in health between areas. This paper examines the variations in morbidity and mortality between urban and rural areas. METHODS This is a cohort study looking at morbidity levels of the population of Northern Ireland at the time of the 2001 census, and subseq...

Journal: :Annals of human biology 2017
Brittany S Walter Sharon N DeWitte

BACKGROUND Late medieval England underwent intensive urbanisation, particularly in its largest city: London. Urban dwellers were exposed to factors such as high population density, elevated risk of infection, unsanitary living conditions and precarious food supplies. AIM To assess whether the urban environment was more detrimental to health than the rural environment, this study compares risk...

2010
Shah Ebrahim Sanjay Kinra Liza Bowen Elizabeth Andersen Yoav Ben-Shlomo Tanica Lyngdoh Lakshmy Ramakrishnan R. C. Ahuja Prashant Joshi S. Mohan Das Murali Mohan George Davey Smith Dorairaj Prabhakaran K. Srinath Reddy

BACKGROUND Migration from rural areas of India contributes to urbanisation and may increase the risk of obesity and diabetes. We tested the hypotheses that rural-to-urban migrants have a higher prevalence of obesity and diabetes than rural nonmigrants, that migrants would have an intermediate prevalence of obesity and diabetes compared with life-long urban and rural dwellers, and that longer ti...

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