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Yuki888 [10]
3 years ago
14

Which of these is a consequence of speeding?

Health
1 answer:
Valentin [98]3 years ago
4 0
A. Increased braking distance
zen
3 years ago
yes its correct
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Epidemiology also helps investigate how well specific therapies or other health interventions prevent or control health problems. Because health is multifaceted, epidemiology is interdisciplinary.  The keys to understanding health, injury, and disease are embedded in the language and methods of epidemiology.

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MPE is a recently established interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary field. Traditional epidemiology (including molecular epidemiology and genome-wide association studies) has the substantial limitation of treating pathogenically heterogeneous diseases (e.g., hypertension, diabetes mellitus, major depression, breast cancer) as a single entity. In contrast, from the MPE viewpoint, any human disease entity is fundamentally heterogeneous from person to person, just as each individual is unique. Nonetheless, by classifying disease according to its pathogenic mechanisms, we can better predict the course of a disease in a given individual. In fact, there exists heterogeneity of risk factors as well as heterogeneity of molecular pathogenesis in any given disease.

A growing body of literature (see Web Appendix (http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/)) supports this MPE paradigm, with evidence suggesting that carcinogenic or protective effects of lifestyle, dietary, environmental, and genetic factors differ according to specific molecular characteristics in neoplastic cells. The MPE concept is gaining widespread adoption., MPE studies have improved our understanding of pathogenesis by demonstrating consistent links between etiologic factors and molecular subtypes of diseases. Furthermore, recent evidence suggests that host factors can interact with tumor molecular changes to modify cancer cell behavior. Thus, the MPE approach, unlike the traditional epidemiologic research design, allows insights into etiologic factors and pathogenic mechanisms.

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