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Writing Assignment 4

The document provides insights into various trends regarding time spent with doctors and social media usage across different age groups. It highlights that time with doctors generally increases with age, except in Japan and Kenya, with Chileans spending the most time overall. Additionally, it shows that social media usage declines with age, with Twitter having the most significant drop among older users, while the internet is the primary news source for younger individuals.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
15 views8 pages

Writing Assignment 4

The document provides insights into various trends regarding time spent with doctors and social media usage across different age groups. It highlights that time with doctors generally increases with age, except in Japan and Kenya, with Chileans spending the most time overall. Additionally, it shows that social media usage declines with age, with Twitter having the most significant drop among older users, while the internet is the primary news source for younger individuals.

Uploaded by

directordmb89
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The chart gives information about the typical time that patients spend with doctors in

various countries, split by age group.

Overall,
1. time spent with doctors generally increases with age( as people get older/ as age
increases), except in Japan and Kenya.
2. Chileans spend by far the most significnt amount of time across all age groups.

3. Overall, while time spent with doctors generally increases with age, except in Japan
and Kenya, Chileans spend by far the most significant amount of time across all age
groups.
While = whilst >>> with

4. Overall, time spent with doctors generally rises as age increases, except in Japan
and Kenya, with Chileans spending by far the most significant amount across all age
groups.
The most common trend is for the time to increase consistently with age. For
example, the figure in France more than doubles from 16 to 38 minutes between the
youngest and oldest people. Likewise, the USA figure rises from 13 to 31, the UK
from 9 to 21, and Italy from 17 to 29. These are all substantial increases. Chile has a
consistent but much slighter climb, from 32 to 39 minutes.

Brazil also shows a rise, although after age 60 there is a decline from 26 minutes to an
eventual 20. India has a more marked rise and fall, peaking at 21 minutes for people
aged 40 to 60, declining to 11 minutes for 70 plus.

Two countries are exceptions. Japan fluctuates across the age groups, between 12
and 16 minutes. Kenya declines steadily as age increases, from 15 minutes for the
youngest to 10 minutes for the oldest people.
The pie charts compare the percentage of users across different age groups on Twitter, Facebook, and
YouTube.

Facebook YouTube Twitter


10-17 14% 15% 9%
18-34 29% 26% 40%
35-49 30% 29% 29%
50-64 19% 20% 18%
65+ 8% 10% 4%

The pie charts compare the percentage of users across different age groups on three
social media platforms: Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube.

Overall,
1. the percentage of users on these social media platforms generally decreases with
age, with Twitter showing the most significant decline among older age groups.
2. While the majority of Facebook and You Tube users are aged 35 to 49, the primary
audience of Twitter falls within the 18–34 age group.

The general trend is for the percentage of users to peak in the middle age groups
and then decrease.
For Facebook,

1. the percentage of users starts at 14% in the 10-17 age group and peaks at 30%
among 35-49-year-olds. It then decreases to 19% for those aged 50-64, followed by a
further decline to 8% for those aged 65 plus.

YouTube usage follows a similar pattern.

The share more than doubles from 15% to 39% between the youngest and middle-
aged groups. However, after age 50, it decreases to 20% and eventually to 10% for
those aged 65 and older.

With a high of 40% among 18-34-year-olds, the proportion of Twitter users, however,
declines consistently as age increases, from 29% for those aged 35-49 to 18% for
those aged 50-64, and finally to 4% for the oldest age group.

The chart shows data about reading among people under 30 years old.
The chart shows data from a survey of library users.
The pie chart indicates the reasons for library visit for different age
groups. The information is divided into three broad categories: research,
borrowing books, and borrowing newspapers.

The highest, 40%, is for people who visit libraries for research purposes.
This is evidence that libraries are necessary sources of scholarly work as
well as business work. The second highest, 35%, is for borrowing books,
as evidence that libraries are still being used for study as well as for
reading for pleasure. The lowest, 25%, is for borrowing newspapers,
quantifying the decline of the need for magazines with the arrival of the
digital age.

In general, the libraries are used for research purposes and borrowing
books, and borrowing newspapers, though less so. This reflects the
evolving role of libraries for satisfying different purposes of their users.
The chart shows how people of different age groups get their news.

The bar chart compares the proportion of the popularity of four


different kinds of media sources, television, radio, newspaper,
and internet that are watched by three different age groups.
Videos show three age ranges: 18-35, 35-55, 55 and over

The internet is the leading way of gathering news among the


youth, aged between 18 to 35 years, with almost 90% of them
using it. This decreases with older individuals such that it is
around 70% for the group between 35 and 55 years and less
than 50% for the 55+ group. On the opposite side is the
television: only around 30% of the 18 to 35-year-olds use it as
their source of news. This is even much lower than the 60% of
the group between 35 and 55 years that uses this form of
media, as well as the over 70% of the 55+ group.

Newspaper and radio are not as popular in general. For the 55+
age group, the usage of the newspaper reaches its peak
(around 25%) but is below 20% for each of the two younger age
groups. The same goes for radio- it peaks at about 30% for the
oldest age group and is below 20% for each of the younger age
groups.

To summarize, young people use online news, while old people


watch TV, which is the most popular kind of print media, and
the radio, that is the most popular among the elderly.

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