High Mortality Rate in UkraineNursing: High Mortality in UkraineGlobal health systems, factors that influence global health systems and health disparitiesUkraine has survived several challenges since its independence. It has the highest number of death rates in the entire European Union. Its high mortality rates are attributed to several factors such as health care inequalities, weak and the poor political system, environmental injuries and others even resulting from communicable and non communicable diseases. Generally, the entire world has had a positive response in its population growth. Ukraines growth has come as an alarm when compared to fellow European states and to what the entire world is gearing towards. The huge health care disparity in Ukraine has proved to have a far-reaching effect on the peoples health status. The portion of the community that is not able to access to basic health care services in the country are not able to live for many years and are more constrained. The health care policies being passed in the country also plays a role, if implemented, in shaping the health system.
According to Frenk (2010), there has been tremendous advancement noted in health and the survival rate throughout the entire globe for the past decades. The life expectancy of the entire world, according to the United Nations world population prospects revision of 2010 rose from 48 years to 68 years by the year 2010. Despite the increase in the longevity of life in nearly all people of the world, an increase in some region has overshadowed other regions. Increase in the total number of people through the development shown by the demographic information is through the improvement of the ability to conceive and ability to survive as markers. Differential risks of cause-specific mortality thus explain the persistent disparities in the pace of improvements in survival across the worlds populations. Countries that have reduced the risk of childhood death from pneumonia and diarrheal diseases, for example, have achieved more rapid gains in longevity and advanced further through their transitions that is seen in demography and epidemiology.
The WHO (2008) report consists of two parts that are well organized. First, deals with the overall changes that and the mortality patterns associated with age specificity that characterize the transition of the demography that is described and it has a relationship with a shifting pattern noted in the distribution of death. Secondly, the roles that the specific major causes leading to death play in contributing to disparities seen in the survival rate globally. The report has highlights on how large burden developed by the communicable disease, including premature mortalities creates a barrier between the demographic and epidemiological transition. This leads to a double burden that ends up causing survival disadvantages in many communities
The WHO’s report aims to inform and encourage all of the public’s attention on the changes in the distribution of deaths on the continents. The focus is on changing the demographics, a focus that has been hampered by the limited research on how migration or population growth has affected the demography. In the report the WHO and related organizations highlight how the population is changing and how there is no reliable data source to assess demographic data sources or the effect of population structure on the demography.
The report has identified key areas, like migration (migration, birth, age, education, employment and income) and mortality trends as a key determinant of demography and on the development of a global demography. The most specific areas are, population and population growth. In particular, the WHO states that the demisation of the population is a key factor in the shift from a global population of people of different ethnic and social origins and in the recent demographic change in the United States, and that the current political, political context has given rise to significant demography and a shift from a global population of people of mixed ethnicity, social and demographic origins. The analysis identified countries with an important population and population trends of different ethnic and family groups and in particular countries with a significant age range and socioeconomic and health care infrastructure as potentially indicators of demography. A key aspect of the research is that the WHO has also suggested to governments to investigate a range of demographic and health trends related to demography and reduce their dependence on international and regional data from nations, such as the United Nations Organisation for Migration.
The WHO recently completed its Population Policy Report for 2001. This is a comprehensive report on global trends in the human needs of the world. It shows that the current political and economic circumstances for demography have made demography and the demography of the populations of different ethnic and family groups significantly more difficult, that different political and demographic circumstances have been more or less favourable to migration, and that the demography of the population is increasingly in flux in the face of political or economic changes
Global demography – in the UN and elsewhere
While in the World Health Organisation (WHO) population figures are a major international resource, it is clear that the demography of the population globally is at the forefront of the world’s health challenges. For example, global demography is more prevalent than any other risk factor in the world according to the World Health Organization (WHO). It is estimated that about one in five children in the world today – nearly one in eight children in all developed countries – develops an inherited disease or is genetically affected. Although the Demography of the People in the World report is focused on the demography of the population globally, there is great public support for the research that the report has on national and international demographic trends across countries, as well as on the demography of the people within countries of all nationalities.
The Demography of the WHO is a multi-year project and includes several important national and international research projects and development activities in many countries including that of the WHO. The Demography