Indian professionals unhealthy
Posted in Health
Tagged Under : Health News, Indian workforce, news, report
All labor and no play is making Indian professionals unhealthy. A study conducted by the World Health Organisation to gauge the bodily condition of India’s workforce has made some startling revelations.Almost 47% of the workforce in Indian industries, especially in urban areas, were found to be plump while around 27% were suffering from hypertension. approximately 10% of those surveyed were also found to be diabetic.The survey, which looked at the health of 35,000 employees and their family members, aged 10-69 years in 10 different industries, and 20,000 randomly selected individuals, found staff at greater peril of increasing chronic disease like heart attack, stroke and cancer.Most of those who were found to be diabetic and hypertensive were, however, from highly urbanised areas.
The report, ‘Preventing Communicable Diseases in the agency through Diet and Physical Activity,’ which has also predict that India would incur an accumulated loss of $236.6 billion by 2015 due to unhealthy lifestyle and a faulty diet leading to chronic diseases, was launched at the World Health Assembly in Geneva on Monday.Predicting an profits loss of $54 billion in 2015 for Indians due to their unhealthy lifestyle, the report asks workplaces to come to the fore in making employees aware of their health and recommends imparting health education for preventing CVDs. WHO says that as populations age in focus and low income countries over the next 25 years, the proportions of deaths due to non-communicable diseases will rise significantly.More than six million people have coronary artery disease and about five million people have rheumatic heart disease. Around 2 lakh babies are born every year with several form of congenital cardiothoracic failing. With the aging inhabitants, degenerative diseases are also increasing.
India also has major number of diabetics in the earth — 25 to 30 million. India is projected to have more than 37 million diabetics in 2010 and more than 57 million in 2025.The WHO study focused on changing harmful behaviour and address physical activity, blood pressure, intake of fruits and vegetables, diabetes, BMI and heart-healthy life, using cognitive theory and the health belief replica.













