The Modernizing Kazakhstan: A Review of Biomedical Data.
- 1 January 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Japan Society of Physiological Anthropology in Journal of PHYSIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY and Applied Human Science
- Vol. 20 (2) , 95-103
- https://doi.org/10.2114/jpa.20.95
Abstract
In order to focus the situation of Kazakhstan today in relation to the processes of modernization and transition to a market economy and to evidence their effects on the biology and health status of the population of Kazakhstan, we have reviewed recently available data for this region (1993-1999). Kazakhstan is still characterized by a pyramid shaped age distribution of its population and by a high incidence of not communicable diseases and lack of nutrient and micronutrients, especially among children. However, the population of Kazakhstan seems to be not immune to the diseases of the modernization. I.e., among women obesity is more frequent than underweight, especially in the urban areas. In rural populations the frequency of clinically relevant hypertension resulted low in the more isolated and traditionally living communities but it increased to 20% in the less isolated one. Although it is expected a strong increase of urbanized population in the next 25 years, currently, modernization is probably influencing life style and nutritional habits of almost only a minority of the inhabitants of Kazakhstan.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lung volume, chest size, and hematological variation in low‐, medium‐, and high‐altitude Central Asian populationsAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2000
- Relationships between blood pressure, anthropometric characteristics and blood lipids in high- and low-altitude populations from Central AsiaAnnals of Human Biology, 2000
- Sex-Specific Migration Patterns in Central Asian Populations, Revealed by Analysis of Y-Chromosome Short Tandem Repeats and mtDNAAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 1999
- Trading Genes along the Silk Road: mtDNA Sequences and the Origin of Central Asian PopulationsAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 1998
- The current state of health care in the former Soviet Union: implications for health care policy and reform.American Journal of Public Health, 1996
- The prediction of extracellular and total body water from bioelectric impedance in a non-Caucasian population from Central AsiaAnnals of Human Biology, 1995
- Tuberculosis trends in Eastern Europe and the former USSRTubercle and Lung Disease, 1994
- Social and Cultural Influences in Cardiovascular Disease: A ReviewTranscultural Psychiatric Research Review, 1984
- Antecedents of Cardiovascular Disease in Six Solomon Islands SocietiesCirculation, 1974
- Altitude and growth: A study of the patterns of physical growth of a high altitude Peruvian Quechua populationAmerican Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1970