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16 February, 07:16

Suppose that 43% of all adults in a certain community are obese and that 36% suffer from diabetes. If 20% of the adults in this community are both obese and suffering from diabetes, what is the probability that a randomly chosen adult in this community is obese or suffers from diabetes (or both) ? Write your answer as a decimal (not as a percentage)

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  1. 16 February, 07:44
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    0.59

    Step-by-step explanation:

    Since the probability of adults in this community that are both obese and suffering from diabetes overlap, when you add 43% and 36%, you count the percentage that overlap twice (Once the obese adults and once for the diabetic adults). Therefore, you have to subtract 20% from 43% + 36% so you only count the overlap once. Solving, 43% + 36% - 20% = 59%, or 0.59.
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