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Chapter 2 Population and Health

Clicker Questions. Chapter 2 Population and Health. Tim Scharks Green River College. Overpopulation is best defined as. a higher number of people in one place than anywhere else. more people crowded together in one place than in other places. the same concept as population density.

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Chapter 2 Population and Health

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  1. Clicker Questions Chapter 2 Population and Health Tim ScharksGreen River College

  2. Overpopulation is best defined as • a higher number of people in one place than anywhere else. • more people crowded together in one place than in other places. • the same concept as population density. • too many people for the environment’s carrying capacity. • faster growth rates than those seen in the 1990s.

  3. Which of the following is not the location of one of the four largest clusters of world population? • Southeast Asia • Africa • East Asia • Europe • South Asia

  4. Which type of land in the list below is the most intensively settled part of the ecumene? • dry lands • cold lands • hot lands • high lands • wet lands

  5. Which letter on this map of agricultural density indicates a place where farm machinery is commonly used?

  6. The most rapid rate of world population growth in history was seen • before1800. • between 1800 and 1900. • between 1900 and 1950. • between 1950 and 2000. • from 2000 on.

  7. The crude death rate may be higher in some wealthy countries than in poorer ones because • it does not consider the age structure of the population. • there may be outbreaks of deadly diseases nearly anywhere. • it does not include deaths that are part of the infant mortality rate. • poorer countries actually have healthier populations. • wealthier countries have higher rates of accidental death.

  8. This is a map of • AFD. • CDR. • TFR. • CBR. • NIR.

  9. Which stage of the demographic transition is considered “high growth”? • stage 1 • stage 2 • stage 3 • stage 4 • stage 5

  10. Which stage of the demographic transition is considered “moderate growth”? • stage 1 • stage 2 • stage 3 • stage 4 • stage 5

  11. The sex ratio is defined as the • number of pregnancy-related deaths per 100,000 live births. • statistical average number of children a woman has in her lifetime. • number of female children per 1,000 live births. • number of females in a population per 100 males. • number of males in a population per 100 females.

  12. A population pyramid is best used to • understand the age structure of a population. • estimate the life expectancy of a population. • explain the cause of any observed gender imbalance. • predict when fertility declines will occur. • consider the effect of infant mortality on population growth.

  13. The epidemiologic transition is a model that • explains population change better than the demographic transition model. • matches leading causes of death to each stage of the demographic transition. • explains how infectious diseases mutate to become more deadly. • doctors use to move patients from hospital care to home care to save on health-care expenditures. • is focused on total fertility rates and the crude death rate.

  14. A neo-Malthusian would most likely support which of the following statements? • Humans are innovative and can adapt to new limits through technology. • A new disease will evolve and decrease growth rapidly through high death rates. • Population growth combined with the lack of some resource will create crisis. • Birth rates are decreasing around the world, and there is little to worry about. • Contraception is insufficient to lower fertility rates.

  15. Contrasting the population policy experiences of China and India reveals that • India has been more successful than China. • Both countries have entered Stage 5 of th. • Neither country has attempted to control their populations, as they are the world’s most populous. • China has been more successful than India, but at a cost to human rights. • Sterilization is the best method of birth control.

  16. Which combination of factors may generate a fifth stage of the epidemiologic transition? • poverty, connections, evolution • diffusion, distribution, connections • cholera, AIDS, Ebola • migration, diffusion, spatial association • globalization, culture, research

  17. The example of Bangladesh illustrates that • people in wealthier countries have larger families because they can afford to. • the use of contraceptives has no relationship to birth rates. • women moving to cities is the major cause of decreasing birth rates. • contraception is less effective than education at lowering birth rates. • making contraception more readily available may decrease birth rates without any other changes.

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