HONG KONG: A new study from the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation discovered life expectancy has increased over six years since 1990 to 2013. Despite these new figures, researchers highlighted that the healthiness of the life expectancy has decreased. That means people live longer but with infectious diseases and short-term injuries, according to statistics. The information was revealed in The Lancet.
Researchers estimated these quantities for acute and chronic diseases and injuries for 188 countries between 1990 and 2013, concluding people live longer but sicker. The investigation determined that the fastest growing global cause of health loss since 1990 has been HIV/AIDS and malaria. However, improvements on people’s health are expected due to recent findings that HIV is generated by our nervous system and not for the virus itself – according to a new study 95 percent of dead cells suicide before been infected by HIV.
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