Vitamin D Status, Intraocular Pressure, and Neuroinflammation
Vitamin D Status, Intraocular Pressure, and Neuroinflammation Glaucoma is a chronic optic neuropathy leading to irreversible vision loss (pmc.ncbi.nlm...
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Vitamin D Status, Intraocular Pressure, and Neuroinflammation Glaucoma is a chronic optic neuropathy leading to irreversible vision loss (pmc.ncbi.nlm...
Bắt đầu bài kiểm tra thị trường miễn phí của bạn trong chưa đầy 5 phút.
Bắt đầu kiểm tra ngayMortality is a term that describes death, and in public health it usually refers to the number of deaths in a group of people over a specific time. When researchers or officials talk about mortality rates, they mean how common death is in a population, often expressed per 1,000 or 100,000 people per year. Mortality helps us understand how deadly a disease or condition is, compare risks between groups, and measure whether health interventions are working. There are different ways to measure it, such as overall mortality, age-specific rates, cause-specific mortality, and life expectancy calculations that estimate how long people in a population might live. Factors that influence mortality include age, genetics, lifestyle choices, access to medical care, socioeconomic status, and environmental conditions. Tracking changes in mortality over time guides public health planning, resource allocation, and prevention strategies like vaccinations or safety regulations. For individuals, understanding population-level mortality can help with personal health decisions, like screening or lifestyle changes, but it doesn’t predict exactly how long any single person will live. Reducing preventable mortality—deaths that could be avoided with known actions—remains a major goal of medicine and policy. Mortality statistics are powerful tools but should be interpreted carefully because numbers can hide differences between subgroups and causes.