Professor Peter Boyle, of Strathclyde University, cited a study which showed there was a 10 percent difference in five-year survival between affluent and deprived areas. However, an hour of exercise a day – which can be be accumulative – can reduce the …
… impact on rates of suicide: so, men in the lowest socioeconomic group living in the most deprived areas are approximately 10 times more likely to kill themselves than men from more privileged socioeconomic backgrounds living in the most affluent areas.
But Prof Boyle will also say that there are in Scotland "considerable differences" for patients due to lifestyle and social class. Citing another expert in the field, he will say: "For example, Professor Charles Gillis has shown that, in Glasgow, two …
America was the most affluent society in the world at that time. New York City became the largest populated city. The airplane, baseball, hotdogs, movie theaters, Model T and radios were the wonderful marvels of this time. This was when the banking …
However even within developed countries, there can be 'considerable differences' due to social class and a person's lifestyle. Research has shown that in Glasgow, for example, 'two women with breast cancer of the same age, presenting for the same …
… impact on rates of suicide: so, men in the lowest socioeconomic group living in the most deprived areas are approximately 10 times more likely to kill themselves than men from more privileged socioeconomic backgrounds living in the most affluent areas.
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However, he points out that even in Scotland, there are significant differences between diagnosis and treatment of women as a result of lifestyle and social class. Prof. Boyle cites a study detailing the outcomes of two women with breast cancer from …