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Detailing the results of an informal study conducted by him, Dr Singh said: “The highest number of diabetes cases (20 per cent) was found in Ludhiana while the lowest incidence of the disease was in Lahaul and Spiti (less than 1 per cent).”
With the urban as well as rural population afflicted with the ailment, the doctor said: “In India, diabetes is not an epidemic anymore — it has turned pandemic.”
According to Dr Singh, the poor spend about 25 per cent of their income on the management of diabetes. Currently, up to 11 per cent of India’s urban population and 3 per cent of the rural population above the age of 15 has diabetes.
“There has been an almost 20 per cent increase in the number of people being diagnosed with diabetes each year.” The factors responsible for the upsurge are: sedentary lifestyle, lack of physical activity, obesity, stress and higher intake of refined cereals as well as high fat and calorie-dense food.
Talking about World Diabetes Day, observed on November 14, Dr Singh said diabetes is a concern the world over. The date also marks the birth anniversary of Frederick Banting who, along with Charles Best, first conceived the idea which led to the discovery of insulin in 1921.
“All said and done, diabetes is a very common condition which can cause an early death. Though with better treatment options available nowadays, it can be controlled,” added Dr Singh.
According to the Diabetes Atlas, published by the International Diabetes Federation, there were an estimated 40.9 million diabetics in India in 2007 (about 16.7 per cent of the global number). This figure is predicted to rise to almost 70 million by 2025, making India the diabetic capital of the world.
Taken from www.expressindia.com
Why Supplements?
Diabetes is attacking young people aged between 12 and 18, according to Diabetes New Zealand.
New estimates indicate 500 young people in the age group have Type 2 diabetes, the disease that was, only a few years ago, virtually unknown in people of that age.
"It used to be a disease that only affected adults over 45 years old, but not any more," Mike Smith, president of Diabetes New Zealand, said yesterday.
Mr Smith said Diabetes Awareness Week, from today until November 24, was a good time for people to think about how they could play a part in reducing the impact the life-threatening disease was having on society.
"It's our own inaction that is allowing Type 2 diabetes to become an epidemic."
While Type 1 diabetes was also on the increase, it was the increased prevalence of Type 2 diabetes which was tied back to lifestyle choices.
The fact it was often preventable made the Type 2 diabetes epidemic even more tragic, he said.
It could often be delayed and possibly prevented by eating less and exercising more.
"Once one person in a family has 'got diabetes', everyone has it, in effect," Mr Smith said. He said there were 180,000 New Zealanders diagnosed with all types of diabetes. There were also 80,000 immediately at risk, having a condition called pre-diabetes, and another 800,000 overweight or obese people in New Zealand who were at longer-term risk of developing Type 2 diabetes.
The emphasis in this year's Diabetes Awareness Week is on young people and families.
- NZPA