Males have worse health because they usually eat more than females or they have so many fights and wars!
Answer:
There are many factors affecting the sex based differences in male and female lifespans.
In some countries the proportion of men in the general population increases with age. Generally this is due to devaluing of female lives and a withholding of medical treatment As the womem age.
In Europe and North America the bias was towards men having shorter lifespans. This was generally felt to be due to male involvement with hazardous behavior (although the impact of maternal death due to child delivery was not accounted for by this theory). However as women began to take over "man's work" and higher positions in corporation the increased stress and lifestyle mpacts tendied to increase the problems with heart attacks and strokes in that population.
yes
literacy rate for males is 70% and for females it is 57.4%, with a growing trend in females from rural areas to study and get higher education. literacy rate in Pakistan has fairly increased over the past years along with its growing economy and reduction in poverty.
The male sex is naturally weaker, probably due to the fact that more females are needed to perpetuate the species through childbirth, but males are not as necessary evolutionarily.
portugals life expectancy rate...males:76..females:82:) $!ll33 n@$t33:)
Most definitely yes they do.
males :82.14% females :65.46% average :74.04%
97.2% males and females
Over a lifetime, the mortality rate for females is identical to that for males: 100% so far. More information is required in order to improve this answer.
The percentage rate for both males and females in Asia that were straight A students and that pursued higher education in the first generation would be a very high 100%.
88 males 44 females
97.2% males and females
breathing rate is nothing but loose it means