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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 51

aggression and lack of harmony in large cities, for example— then the emotional body will be quickly and deeply disturbed. Can we grow up with a strong, healthy emotional plane under such circumstances? The answer for most of us is no, we cannot.
This is the reason why the weakest, most vulnerable aspect of the people of western civilization is their emotional level.
A comparison of death rates attributed to suicide (per 100,000 of the standard population) can give us an impression of the comparative imbalance between developed and developing countries on the emotional-psychic level.202122
Nobody has so far remarked on the significant discrepancy between the high incidence of suicide (emotional disturbances) in the developed and Communist bloc countries (in spite of nationwide health coverage) and the low incidence in developing countries that have poor health coverage from the perspective of "established" medicine.
It is apparent that countries with widespread health coverage, be it voluntary or enforced, have inflicted terrible emotional disturbances on their people, the climax of which is depicted in the rates of suicide.
Western countries (developed):
1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985

Denmark — _ _ 29.1 28.2 _ _
Austria — — — 26.8 26.0 26.2 —
Switzerland — — — __ — 23.4 23.7
FDR — __ __ 19.9 — 18.7 -—
France — — 19.2 — — — 21.3
Sweden — — — 18.7 — 18.8 —
Canada 14.7 — — 14.7 — — —
USA — 12.0 — 12.3 — — —
Eastern European countries:
1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985
Hungary — — — 42.7 — 45.0 —
Czechoslovakia— — 20.7 — 19.9
Yugoslavia — — 17.4 17.4 — — —
Bulgaria — — — 15.2 13.1 16.6 —
The USSR, Rumania and the Democratic Republic of Germany have not given any rates.