The answer is 35%.
90 percentage
Statistics can be helpful and found in everyday life. You use it to calculate the percentage of people with diabetes, a basketball player's shooting percentage, freethrow percentage, losing weight, etc...
30 out of 50
Approximately 6.4% of the world's adult population lived with diabetes in 2010.
Emma Padilla died on July 2, 1966, in Mexico City, Mexico of diabetes.
Although Mexico is a world leader in hunger reduction, there is still a 5% of children under 5 suffering with malnutrition.
The term for the percentage of people in Mexico who can read and write is "literacy rate." As of recent estimates, Mexico's literacy rate is around 94-95%, indicating a high level of education among its population. This rate reflects the efforts made in the country to improve educational access and quality over the years.
Yes, a lot of Samoan people suffer from Diabetes.
Hawaii had the largest percentage of people who did not speak English in the 1990s, and it was second in 2000.
According to the World Bank, 5.2% of people in Mexico live on less than US$2.00 per day, qualifying as living under "extreme poverty".
Hawaii had the largest percentage of people who did not speak English in the 1990s but was second in 2000, with California holding that position in 2000.
There are two types of diabetes. The first is Type One, or Juvenile, diabetes. Type One diabetes is found in statistically similar numbers throughout the world. Type Two diabetes, also called adult onset diabetes, is most commonly associated with obesity. This is the type of diabetes that the American Diabetes Association states has reached epidemic proportions in America. I would conjecture that the reason Type Two diabetes is so widespread in the United States is that this country is by far the one that consumes the most junk food, leading to a more obese populace on average.