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Diabetes Reportedly to
Double Worldwide by 2030
Diabetes
rates will double worldwide by 2030, to 366 million people with
the disease, even if the obesity rate remains stable, an international
team of researchers reported.
But the rate will go up even higher
if, as expected, more and more people become overweight, eat a
so-called Western diet and stop exercising, the researchers said.
"The total number of people with
diabetes is projected to rise from 171 million in 2000 to 366
million in 2030," the researchers wrote in the latest issue of
Diabetes Care, published by the American Diabetes Association.
Diabetes is a disease in which
the body does not produce or properly use insulin, a hormone needed
to convert sugar, starches and other food into energy.
Sarah Wild of the University of
Edinburgh in Britain and colleagues in Australia, Denmark and
Switzerland, looked at type-2 diabetes figures from around the
world, using United Nations data to project future diabetes rates
based on current trends.
"Assuming that age-specific prevalence
remains constant, the number of people with diabetes in the world
is expected to approximately double between 2000 and 2030, based
solely upon demographic changes," Wild and her colleagues said.
"The greatest relative increases
will occur in the Middle Eastern Crescent, sub-Saharan Africa,
and India."
The figures do not include type-1
or juvenile diabetes, which is an autoimmune disease separate
from type-2 diabetes.
Columbia University's Earth Institute
in New York was to issue a report on Monday finding that heart
disease, once an illness of the rich, is killing more and more
people in poor countries.
The report blames cigarette smoking,
cheap food and urban living and said heart disease was taking
the lives of middle-aged people in the developing world, just
as they reach their peak economic potential.
The Columbia researchers noted
that obesity and diabetes were also on the rise on the developing
world.
Diabetes and heart disease are
closely linked. Both are strongly associated with a poor diet
and lack of exercise.
"The human and economic costs of
this epidemic are enormous," Wild and colleagues said, calling
for "a concerted, global initiative" to address the epidemic.
A 2001 study by the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention projected that 29 million Americans
would be diagnosed with diabetes by 2050. Currently an estimated
16 million Americans have type-2 diabetes.
Reference
Source 89
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