Hehehe ... ternyata orang2 Arab itu penyakitan krn kebiasaan mereka.
 
Kebiasaan di Arab ini bukan sekedar krn tradisi doang, tp kalo dilihat lbh 
dalam, agama islamlah yg bikin orang Arab jdi penyakitan, krn tradisi di Arab 
itu semua berdasarkan ajaran Islam yg ngatur semua aspek kehidupan orang Islam 
sampe ke berak aja hrs diatur oleh agama Islam.
 
http://www.ansamed.info/ansamed/en/news/sections/generalnews/2012/03/13/visualizza_new.html_131156617.html
 
Qatar: surge in diabetes/obesity, unhealthy Arab habits
Illnesses linked to Arab world social traditions, experts
13 March, 14:33
  
(ANSAmed) - DOHA, MARCH 13 - There seems to be an ever clearer relation between 
the social habits of the Arab world and a number of malaises climbing to 
frightening levels among Qatar's population. In the Emirate, 20% of the 
population suffers from diabetes according to figures released by the Qatar 
Diabetes Association (QDA). Over 215,000 people have been diagnosed as diabetic 
in Qatar, and the disorder is affecting more and more children and not just 
adults. The quality of life and daily habits of the Arab world tend to foster 
the spread of this illness often stemming from obesity, which affects over 40% 
of the population according to the National Health Strategy 2011-2016. The 
Emir's government is ever more concerned and is trying to hold in check the 
unhealthy eating habits of Qataris, attempting to force fast food restaurants 
to write the number of calories on every dish they serve. Obesity, diabetes and 
hypertension are also the cause of over 500
 new cases of kidney problems reported every year by the Hamad Medical 
Corporation of Doha. Every year over 7,000 patients are hospitalised in the 
nephrology ward of the Hamad Medical Hospital, and over 2,500 are on a waiting 
list for kidney transplants: the figures are significant when taking into 
consideration the fact that Qatar has an overall population of about 1.5 
million inhabitants. This report seems the direct consequence of the country's 
social habits. Sports are a problem more than a form of entertainment. The 
traditional attire, a long white tunic with the keffiyah for men and the abaya 
(a long black tunic) for women, make playing almost any sport nearly impossible 
and obliging a compromise between cultural and religious traditions and the 
possibility to conduct a healthy life and engage in physical activity. In a 
conservative country with the highest rate of mosques per capita in the world, 
many would opt not give up their traditional habits
 for a run or a football match. Most people do not spend much time walking in 
the streets, in part due to the high summer temperatures which make a normal 
stroll an exhausting effort, and in part because it is considered degrading. 
Most of the population get around exclusively by car.

In addition to making physical activity difficult, the traditional attire 
prevents sun exposure and leads to another dysfunction, that of vitamin D 
deficiency. According to a study by the Hamad Medical Hospital in Doha, 90% of 
those involved in the study suffered from this deficiency due to a lack of 
exposure to the sun's rays. In an interview with the Qatari press, Doctor 
Mohamed Khanjar of the Hamad Medical Hospital urged the population to expose 
their faces, calves and hands to the sun for at least 30 minutes per day - 
being the only parts of the body able to be revealed without giving rise to 
religious or social problems.

Due to their personal choice or that of their families, Muslim women avoid 
sports leading to contact with men or in their presence, and so many gyms and 
sports centres become off-limits. Another obstacle to sports is Ramadan, an 
entire month set aside for fasting and the avoidance of food and water before 
sundown. During Ramadan most of the population sleep during the day, with the 
iftar beginning at sundown: large feasts at which many end up eating so much 
they need to be taken to hospital casualty wards, with a record high almost 
8,000 cases of indigestion recorded at the Hamad Medical Hospital emergency 
room solely in the first week of Ramadan 2011. In this sense the habits and 
customs of the Arab world foster an increase in the rate of diabetes within a 
population that is steadily putting on more and more weight and living a 
sedentary lifestyle. Another traditional practice leading to disease, in this 
case of a genetic type, are marriages between
 members of the same family. In Gulf countries marriages are often arranged 
between families, causing cousins and relatives to marry each other.

These marriages often result in the birth of children with serious genetic 
disorders, including Down Syndrome. According to the Center for Arab Genomic 
Studies (CAGS) there are over 250 types of genetic disorders in the United Arab 
Emirates, the country seeing the fifth highest rate of inter-family marriages, 
with half being between members of the same family. The true tragedy linked to 
this cultural habit are the cases of children with birth defects, In Qatar, 
about 19,000 children are born every year, and the Paediatric Surgery 
Department of Doha's Hamad Medical Corporation carries out about 3,000 
paediatric operations every year, including over 200 on children born with 
serious birth defects. This is why at Qatar's First International Paediatric 
Surgery Congress and the 12th edition of the Pan-Arab Paediatric Surgeons 
Association Congress there was discussion on the surgical procedures for birth 
defects, as it is the main problem in the sector.
 (ANSAmed).

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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