JAPAN’S CULTURAL HERITAGE AND TRADITIONAL HEALTH SYMBIOSIS

Authors

  • Sana Sarfaraz, Saroj Rizwan Khan , Kainat Saif

Abstract

The dimensional dysphonia of the Japanese health network and the expulsive response to transferable and non-transferable disease results from the everchanging policies and periods the continent had condemned over decades from colonial redemption and the nepotism phase of time. Japanese expectancy over health administration has become a worldwide standard for efficient health care with low rates and expenditures. It is notably justified that Japanese citizens have a higher age factor and high active life resilience for accommodated and energetic life acceptancy. According to the international birth rate control league, Japanese female life expectancy is ranked number one globally since 1980. Also, over twenty years, the life expectancy of Japanese citizens has increased by 5.5 percent from 81.9 years in 1990 to 86.4 years in 2010 for females and from 75.9 years in 1990 to 79.6 years in 2010 having a life expectancy of 84.79 years in 2021. Japan is a cultural and sub-cultural state having a pre-dominated claim over its health and remedial supremacy from the 19th century. However, modernized western supremacy has prompted traditional Japanese living standards with the diverse art of food and healthy life. Society-based values, traditions, and cultural remedies prompt Japanese policies. The article will prognosticate the pre-dominated history of Japanese health care and the past chain of dangerous diseases and mortality rates within Japanese cities and townships. The study of terms and policies of the Japanese healthy sector with the western health dominance with the brief analysis of medical expenditures between the two traditional and scientific regions

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Published

2022-12-30

How to Cite

Sana Sarfaraz, Saroj Rizwan Khan , Kainat Saif. (2022). JAPAN’S CULTURAL HERITAGE AND TRADITIONAL HEALTH SYMBIOSIS. International Journal of Policy Studies, 2(2). Retrieved from http://ijpstudies.com/index.php/ijps/article/view/32