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Mortality, Biochemistry, Diet and Lifestyle in Rural China: Geographic Study of the Characteristics of 69 Counties in Mainland China and 16 Areas in Taiwan
Mortality, Biochemistry, Diet and Lifestyle in Rural China: Geographic Study of the Characteristics of 69 Counties in Mainland China and 16 Areas in Taiwan

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Authors: Junshi Chen, Richard Peto, Wen-harn Pan, Bo-qui Liu, T. Colin Campbell, Jillian Boreham, Banoo Parpia, Patricia Cassano, Zheng-ming Chen
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Discount Category: Book

Selling Price: $295.00
Buy Used: $42.77
Potential Savings: $252.23 (86%)



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Customer Ratings: 4.0 out of 5 stars 1 comments

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1 Blg
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 840
Shipping Weight (pounds): 4.4
Dimensions (inch): 11.7 x 8.4 x 1.7

ISBN: 0198569335
Dewey Decimal Number: 614
EAN: 9780198569336

Publication Date: March 16, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Comments:

Product Description
This book analyses patterns in rural China in the late 1980s: patterns of causes of death, of what people ate, what they smoked and drank, what kinds of houses they lived in, what they worked at, their education, and many measurements of their blood (for cholesterol, vitamins, evidence of infectious disease) and urine (for food metabolites and other factors). The variation is examined at the level of counties scattered all over mainland China and Taiwan, representing the extremes of values for deaths from specific cancers; ie the counties with the highest and the lowest rates of lung cancer, or the highest and lowest for liver cancer. Coincidentally, this covers the extremes of many of the other variables, such as the intake of fresh fruits and vegetables, and smoking rates. The analysis that fills the pages is the correlation of all of these patterns, one variable at a time, with all the others. The question it answers is, "How well does the variation among the counties for one variable (eg cholesterol in the blood) correlate with the variation across China in deaths from different diseases (eg heart disease)?". If the correlation is strong, it may mean that the variables are related in some causal sense, although this cannot be assumed. If the correlation is weak, it means that the variation must be caused mainly by other factors. Importantly, if the correlation is weak, it does not necessarily mean that the two variables are not related; for example, a weak correlation between blood cholesterol and deaths from heart disease does not mean that cholesterol is not implicated in heart disease, but that in China other factors are more important. Each variable page is similarly arranged, and there are keys to interpreting each element at the beginning of major sections. The book also includes numerous extra tables in the back that give mean values for many variables. These can be useful as many of these values in China are so different from the much more available and common Western values. We tend to think of the range of Western variables as somehow 'normal', without realizing that in China the mean value may not even be within the generally accepted normal range that we are used to.


Customer Comments:

4 out of 5 stars Data, Data, Data   December 16, 2006
 4 out of 4 found this comment useful.

Excellent, but expensive (they could have at least made it hard cover) report of the data from "The China Study". There is no real text or discussion. This is the raw data so you can do your own analysis.

It takes a few minutes to get used to the organization but once you understand the system it's not bad to flip around to delve into the details you want.

This is a great reference book. Great data for doing your own studies. This information would be more useful if provided on a CD so it could be electronically extracted and manipulated. Typing it by hand into your own software is tedious and time consuming.

This book is not something that very many people will be interested in.