Lifestyle diseases Flashcards
What is health?
The state of physical and mental well-being.
What are the major causes of ill health?
Diseases both communicable + non-communicable.
What are communicable diseases?
Diseases that can spread person to person or between animals and people - e.g. malaria, measles.
Can be caused by bacteria, viruses, parasites or fungi.
What are non- communicable diseases?
Cannot be spread between people or between animals and people - e.g. coronary heart disease.
What types of diseases may interact?
- Defects in immune system means an individual is more likely to suffer from infectious diseases.
- Viruses living in cells may be the trigger for cancer
- Immune reactions initially caused by a pathogen can trigger allergies such as skin rashes and asthma.
- Severe physical ill health can lead to depression and other mental illness.
What other factors can affect your physical and mental health?
Poor diet
Stress
Life situations
What are risk factors linked to?
Increase rate of disease
What can risk factors be?
- Aspects of a person’s lifestyle
- Substances in the person’s body or environment.
List lifestyle effects on non-communicable diseases.
- Effects of diet, smoking and exercise on cardiovascular disease.
- Obesity as a risk factor for Type 2 Diabetes
- Effect of alcohol on brain + liver
- Effect of smoking on lung disease + lung cancer
- Effects of smoking and alcohol on unborn babies
- Carcinogens, including ionising radiation, as risk factors in cancer.
What lifestyle factors have different effects globally?
Globally, non-communicable diseases are more common in developed countries as people generally earn more and can buy high-fat food.
What lifestyle factors have different effects nationally?
Nationally, cardiovascular disease, obesity and Type 2 diabetes are more common in poorer areas - people there are more likely to smoke, have a poor diet and not exercise.
What lifestyle factors have different effects locally?
Your individual choices affect how common a disease is locally.
What are the human costs of non-communicable diseases?
Lower quality of life or shorter lifespan.
What are the financial costs of non-communicable diseases?
- Cost of researching and treating diseases is huge
- Expensive for individuals to move or adapt their home because of a disease.
- If a person can’t work anymore or they die, their family’s income will be reduced.
- Reduction of number of people able to work can affect a country’s economy.