Chronic
Chronic diseases and non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are often used interchangeably, but there are distinctions. Chronic diseases refer to a broad category of long-lasting health conditions, which can include both communicable diseases (like HIV/AIDS) and non-communicable diseases. Non-communicable diseases specifically refer to conditions that are not transmitted from person to person, such as heart disease, diabetes, and cancer. Therefore, all NCDs are chronic diseases, but not all chronic diseases are non-communicable.
Diseases are frequently referred to as communicable or non-communicable. Communicable diseases comprise infectious diseases such as tuberculosis and measles, while non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are mostly chronic diseases such as cardiovascular diseases, cancers, and diabetes. That leads to the term communicable.
well this stands for: Chronic Non-Communicable Disease
No
Communicable diseases can spread easily from person to person, leading to rapid outbreaks and higher infection rates in a community. This makes them potentially more dangerous as they can affect a larger number of individuals quickly. Non-communicable diseases, on the other hand, are typically chronic conditions that do not spread through direct contact.
Nancy Phaswana-Mafuya has written: 'Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in developing countries' -- subject(s): Chronic diseases, Developing Countries, Chronic Disease
Uncommunicable diseases or Non-communicable diseases is considered as lifestlye diseases like heart attack, hypertension, stroke, cancer, diabetes, and it is not transferable.
Because that's the way it is Because that's the way it is
They have hemroids.
communicable disease
Non-communicable. It is a neurological disease
non-communicable is the opposite of communicable.