Epidemiologic transition |
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Many low- and middle-income countries currently have a dual burden of both infectious and chronic conditions as they move through the epidemiologic transition, providing a unique opportunity to study infectious and chronic disease interactions
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Rapid economic development results in contrasting lifestyles; for example, overweight and obesity occur alongside underweight and stunting, allowing the study of both in one environment
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Risk factors |
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Unique patterns of incidence and prevalence of chronic diseases such as hypertension, stroke, and cancer exist
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Differing lifestyle, environmental, dietary and infectious risk factors have never been studied before
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A better understanding of the exposure prevalence of these causal factors is needed
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Genetic diversity |
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Genetic susceptibility to infectious and chronic conditions varies considerably across population and ethnic groups. Scientific findings that are applicable to diverse populations are needed
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Unparalleled opportunity to examine gene–gene and gene–environment interactions
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Nested interventions |
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Stimulate political will |
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Demonstrating the prevalence of known risk factors such as smoking and alcohol use and the diseases they cause among low- and middle-income countries’ populations could stimulate political will to tackle them aggressively
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Long-term studies afford training opportunities to attenuate or reverse brain drain
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