The Borneo Post

A fifth of global deaths linked to diet — Study

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PARIS: Fewer children are dying before their fifth birthday and although humans are living longer than ever before, one in five deaths last year were linked to poor diet, researcher­s said yesterday.

More than 1.6 million people in poor countries died in 2016 from diarrhoea caused by contaminat­ed water and food, while another 2.4 million succumbed to lung infections that mostly could have been prevented or treated.

Another two million mothers and newborns perished due to complicati­ons at birth that rudimentar­y health care could have largely avoided.

AIDS and tuberculos­is each claimed more than a million lives, while malaria killed over 700,000 people, according to halfadozen studies published jointly in The Lancet, a leading medical journal. But trend lines have declined over the last decade for these communicab­le diseases.

The same cannot be said for viral hepatitis, which killed 1.34 million people in 2016 – 22 per cent more than in 2000, according to the World Health Organisati­on.

“Hepatitis deaths can be avoided,” said Raquel Peck, CEO of World Hepatitis Alliance, pointing out that no global facility exists to combat the disease and that most sufferers don’t even know they have it.

Nearly 55 million people died in 2016, while 129 million were born, leaving a net gain of 74 humans on the planet. Global life expectancy last year was 75.3 years for women, and nearly 70 for men.

The Japanese averaged 83.9 years, while citizens of the Central African Republic beat the odds if they make it past 50, a discrepanc­y of more than three decades between highest and lowest lifespans.

Nearly three quarters of all deaths in 2016 were caused by non-communicab­le diseases, with heart disease related to restricted blood flow – 9.5 million deaths – the single biggest killer of all. That’s an increase of nearly 20 per cent in a decade.

Similarly, mortality due to another so- called ‘ lifestyle’ disease, diabetes, went up by more than 30 per cent over the same period to 1.4 million.

Cancers – led by lung cancer – are also on the rise, accounting for nearly nine million deaths in 2016, 17 per cent more than in 2006. — AFP

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