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Lazy living takes toll on Chinese livers
07 Sep 2007 04:11:35 GMT
Source: Reuters
BEIJING, Sep 7 (Reuters) - Chinese government officials, many of whom are partial to liquor-fuelled banquets while managing affairs of state, are often unhealthy, suffering high blood pressure and liver diseases, state media reported on Friday.

Of 8,199 working and retired officials examined in China's booming southern province of Guangdong, more than half were classed as unhealthy, and more than a third had high blood pressure, the China Daily said, citing provincial health authorities.

Twenty-seven percent showed diet-related liver diseases, the paper said.

"Government officials have to deal with a lot of pressure at work as well as handle complicated interpersonal communications and plenty of social activities, so they are more likely to develop these kinds of diseases," the paper quoted Liao Xinbo, a vice-director with Guangdong's health bureau, as saying.

Prostate complications had become a "common complaint" in male officials, while almost 20 percent of women officials showed breast-related problems, the newspaper added.

Last month, a survey of traffic police in eight Chinese cities found an average life expectancy of just 43 years due to dire working conditions and pollution, state media reported.
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Children infected by HIV play Chinese chess at their dormitory in a red ribbon primary school in Linfen, north China's Shanxi province September 13, 2007. The school, operated by a hospital since 2004, provides cultural courses and lodging for eleven HIV infected children, aged 7 to 12. China reported 18,543 new cases of HIV/AIDS in the first half of this year, state media said, near the number for the whole of 2006.



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