ABSTRACT
Apresenta o informe epidemiológico do Tocantins dando alusão aos Número de Casos de Beribéri, Doenças Crônicas, Taxa de óbitos por acidente de transporte terrestre, Acidentes de Trânsito, Coberturas das Vacinas, casos confirmados de meningites por etiologia, Hanseníase, tuberculose, doenças diarreica aguda, Toxoplasmose Gestacional e Congênita, HIV/AIDS, hepatites virais no ano de 2020.
It presents the epidemiological report of Tocantins alluding to the Number of Beriberi Cases, Chronic Diseases, Death rate due to land transport accidents, Traffic Accidents, Vaccine Coverage, confirmed cases of meningitis by etiology, Hansen's disease, tuberculosis, acute diarrheal diseases, Gestational and Congenital Toxoplasmosis, HIV / AIDS, viral hepatitis in 2020.
Presenta el informe epidemiológico de Tocantins referido al Número de Casos de Beriberi, Enfermedades Crónicas, Tasa de mortalidad por accidentes de transporte terrestre, Accidentes de tráfico, Cobertura de vacunas, Casos confirmados de meningitis por etiología, Enfermedad de Hansen, Tuberculosis, Enfermedades diarreicas agudas Toxoplasmosis gestacional y congénita, VIH / SIDA, hepatitis viral en 2020.
Il présente le rapport épidémiologique de Tocantins faisant allusion au nombre de cas de béribéri, aux maladies chroniques, au taux de mortalité dû aux accidents de transport terrestre, aux accidents de la circulation, à la couverture vaccinale, aux cas confirmés de méningite par étiologie, à la maladie de Hansen, à la tuberculose, aux maladies diarrhéiques aiguës, Toxoplasmose gestationnelle et congénitale, VIH / SIDA, hépatite virale en 2020.
Subject(s)
Humans , Accidents, Traffic/statistics & numerical data , Annual Report , Tuberculosis , Toxoplasmosis , Chronic Disease/epidemiology , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome , HIV , Dysentery , Vaccine-Preventable Diseases , Leprosy , MeningitisABSTRACT
What will life in the 21st century? Will the world continue to grow healthier, with ever more diseases conquered by scientific advances, and life expectancy extending even longer? Or will new diseases and failing drugs cancel out these gains? If populations live longer, will these extra years be healthy and productive or merely an extended sentence of suffering? Will continuing population growth finally stifle the panet's life, depleting finite resources, polluting beyond repair, and making megacities and urban slums the home for more and more? Or will better finally planning options - and mounting deaths from AIDS - reverse recent trends? Will we conquer malnutrition, obesity, drug abuse, poverty, depression, and the common cold? Will we eradicate polio, leprosy, measles and other anciest foes? Will deaths from heart disease and cancer finally begin to decline? And when will be able to afford them? Will the gaps between the health of rich and poor grow ever wider? These are some of the many questions addressed in The World Health Report 1998. Issued as the World Health Organization marks its 50th anniversary, the report takes an expert look at health trends over the past five decades, assesses the current global situation, and predicts how health conditions, diseases, and the tools for managing them will evolve up to the year 2025. Using the latest data gathered and validated by WHO, the report paints a picture of a world posed to achieve unprecedent good health - if the lessons learned during recent decades are understood and heeded
Subject(s)
Global Health , Public Health , World Health Organization , Delivery of Health Care , Public Health Administration , Forecasting , Health Status , Annual Report , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , International CooperationABSTRACT
What will life in the 21st century? Will the world continue to grow healthier, with ever more diseases conquered by scientific advances, and life expectancy extending even longer? Or will new diseases and failing drugs cancel out these gains? If populations live longer, will these extra years be healthy and productive or merely an extended sentence of suffering? Will continuing population growth finally stifle the panet's life, depleting finite resources, polluting beyond repair, and making megacities and urban slums the home for more and more? Or will better finally planning options - and mounting deaths from AIDS - reverse recent trends? Will we conquer malnutrition, obesity, drug abuse, poverty, depression, and the common cold? Will we eradicate polio, leprosy, measles and other anciest foes? Will deaths from heart disease and cancer finally begin to decline? And when will be able to afford them? Will the gaps between the health of rich and poor grow ever wider? These are some of the many questions addressed in The World Health Report 1998. Issued as the World Health Organization marks its 50th anniversary, the report takes an expert look at health trends over the past five decades, assesses the current global situation, and predicts how health conditions, diseases, and the tools for managing them will evolve up to the year 2025. Using the latest data gathered and validated by WHO, the report paints a picture of a world posed to achieve unprecedent good health - if the lessons learned during recent decades are understood and heeded