Thursday 21 May 2020

7 Reasons Men Die First.

POPULAR CULTURE MAY paint men as the stronger sex, but from the moment a


POPULAR CULTURE MAY paint men as the stronger sex, but from the moment a boy is born, his life is more likely than his sister's to be cut short. Across national and cultural boundaries, men die an average of seven years earlier than women; the disparity in the United States is approximately five years. In a new book, Why Men Die First, Marianne Legato, a specialist in gender-specific medicine at Columbia University, explains: They're genetically and biologically fragile to start with, she says, and societal norms that encourage and even demand risky behavior by men put them at risk. Still, Legato told U.S. News, men and their families can push back. She highlighted seven reasons why males die prematurely—and seven actions they can take to prolong their time.

1. Males are burdened with natural genetic deficits.While every cell in a woman's body has two large X chromosomes, men have one X and one smaller Y chromosome; the Y is half the size. The "spare" X chromosomes allow women's bodies to compensate when faced with damage in ways that men's cells cannot. In addition, mutations are three to six times more likely in a Y chromosome than an X chromosome. This genetic deficit could be part of the reason why miscarriages, infections, birth defects, cancers, and many other health problems strike males especially hard. 

2. The womb is more treacherous for boys.Baby boys are one-and-a-half to two times more likely to die at birth than girls. A weaker immune system, a tendency for immature lung development, inadequate blood flow to male fetuses, and high vulnerability to maternal stresses seem to be the culprits. Brain hemorrhages, congenital malformations, pneumonia, and urinary tract infections are all more common among male newborns.

 3. Males are more likely to have developmental disorders.An article published in the British Medical Journal notes that a variety of disorders—including reading delays, deafness, autism, ADHD, blindness, seizure disorders, hyperactivity, clumsiness, stammering, and Tourette's syndrome are three to four times more common in boys than girls. There are 10 males for every female with Asperger's syndrome, a mild form of autism. 

4. They're biologically more prone to risky behavior.Slower development of the area of the brain that governs judgment makes males—especially adolescents—more likely than girls to die in accidents. According to a National Safety Council statistics, males were involved in 82 percent of accidental deaths associated with firearms, 87 percent of bicycle-related fatalities, nearly double the number of poisoning deaths, and almost four times as many homicides in 2004. Likewise, in 2006 they were in 81 percent of fatal crashes involving drunken driving.

 5. A "suck-it-up" culture means men often languish with depression.Although women are more likely to make suicide attempts, the ratio of men to women who actually kill themselves is nearly 4 to 1. For men ages 20 to 24, fully 15 percent of all deaths are suicides.

 6. Men choose more dangerous occupations.The bulk of sailors, firefighters, police officers, construction workers, and farmers are men. Of the 5,734 fatalities that occurred on the job in 2005, men were the victims in the vast majority—5,328. And men still do the vast majority of the fighting during military conflicts. 

7. Coronary artery disease strikes men early.Estrogen seems to protect women from heart disease until they are well into midlife, but it is common for symptoms to begin in men by the age of 35. Making matters worse, men have naturally low levels of protective HDL cholesterol. The result: Between 70 percent and 89 percent of all sudden cardiac events occur in men, and men die three times more frequently of coronary artery disease than women.

Seven Things Men Can Do to Lengthen Their Lives

1. Know your blood pressure no matter what your age; exercise vigorously every day to increase your naturally low HDL levels; and start getting screened for coronary artery disease in your twenties.

2. Go to the doctor and tell him or her if you're having a health problem of any kind. Our culture may reward stoic behavior from men; disease does not. This is especially true for men who feel sad or depressed for extended periods. It is extremely common for men to internalize and ignore their problems. Seek help.

3. Monitor your behavior and minimize tendencies to act in a boneheaded way. You know better than to drive recklessly, ignore safety protocols at work, or operate machinery while intoxicated.

4. Keep off excess weight to avoid a phalanx of chronic diseases that will impair your quality of life well before they actually kill you. Coronary artery disease, diabetes, and prostate cancer are a few extremely common risks associated with being overweight that typically take a toll on your well-being—including the ability to have an erection—long before life is actually cut short. In some cases, it's the disease itself that causes the sexual problems; in others it's the medications or surgeries used to treat the disease that take the toll.

5. Don't smoke. According to the American Cancer Society, smokers who quit at age 35 can expect to live up to eight and a half years longer than continuing smokers. Risk begins to fall within months and falls to the levels of nonsmokers in three to five years.

6. Don't fear digital rectal exams. PSA screening for prostate cancer is controversial because it might pick up tiny cancers that aren't clinically important, but there's little doubt that digital exams reveal dangerous cancers that have to be treated. Same goes for colonoscopies. They're uncomfortable, yes, but far less so than malignant colon cancer and chemotherapy.

7. Protect your head, and tell your doctor if you get dinged especially hard. A CT scan may be needed. Concussions may seem harmless, but they can cause long-term brain bleeding that lead to memory problems, disrupted sleep, and personality changes that last a lifetime

What other things do you think cause shorter live for men, waiting to hear at the comment section 


📣NEWS UPDATE FOR 📣 21/05/2020



📣COTE D IVOIRE📣

Covid-19: Côte d'Ivoire recorded 78 new cases this Wednesday, May 20, bringing to 2231 the number of confirmed cases including 1083 cured and 29 deaths. (Official), Breaking News

Clashes broke out between prison officers on duty this Wednesday, May 20, 2020 at the Abidjan Detention and Correctional Center 

Ministry of Employment and Social Protection: A press release circulating on social networks, stating that Monday May 25, 2020 would be a holiday, is an information (Press release)

Economy: France officially approved this Wednesday the disappearance of the CFA F. It concerns the implementation of the agreement of December 21 last announced by the Ivorian President

End of the CFA franc: The future currency, eco, will keep a fixed parity with the euro (French bill adopted this May 20 in the Council of Ministers).

A French bill validating the end of the CFA franc adopted on May 20 in the Council of Ministers.

The United Kingdom announces the provision of 15 billion FCFA in financial aid for the Covid-19 Fund of the African Union (Official)

📣NIGERIA📣

Lagos begs doctors as NMA orders indefinite sit-at-home

Oshiomhole’s lawlessness will destroy APC, says deputy chairman

Ogun human part dealers beat buyers over N1m fee

North has 54% of cases, 70% new infections – Northern govs

Lagos doctors, nurses always abandon isolation centre patients — Survivor

[BREAKING] COVID-19: Benue index case discharged

Actor stabs neighbour to death over electricity bill

Kajuru killings: Again, El-Rufai meets monarchs, others

Groups seek psychiatric test for lady who drowned daughter

Banks’ total assets rise 11.2% to N42tn

Bolivia’s health minister sacked for alleged COVID-19 fraud

Two suspected Ghosn accomplices arrested in US

WHO records highest daily number of COVID-19 cases

12 stranded Nigerians pay N7m for Cote d’Ivoire charter flight

We can’t reinstate demoted DG, FIIRO board tells Onu

Edo man arrested for killing cousin over N2m

Contractors block agric minister’s office over debts

Ogun human part dealers beat buyers over N1m fee

Gunmen abduct naval officer in Ondo, demand N50m

Ekiti man in court for allegedly stealing N100,000

Two killed as rival cults clash in Kwara
 
‘Poor health infrastructure making COVID-19 containment difficult’

Obey COVID-19 safety protocols, Emzor boss tells Nigerians

I made Kanu angry at Arsenal – Fabregas

Doping: IPC hands Paralympian Oyema four-year ban

Ogunbote laments exclusion of local players from Eagles

Air France-KLM Terminates A380 Fleet With Immediate Effect 

 NDA Postpones Screening Test For 72 Regular Courses 

 Kwara Discharges 3 COVID-19 Patients, Records 3 More Cases 

 60% Of COVID-19 Cases In Rivers Are Oil Workers - Governor Wike 

President Buhari Sacks Charles Uwakwe As NECO Registrar, Four Officials 

284 New COVID-19 Cases, 106 Discharged And 8 Deaths On May 20 

 
BLESSED DAY 
STAT SAFE

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