Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

Health

Diabetes cases quadruple to 422 million as rates in poorer countries rise steeply: WHO

The number of adults with diabetes has quadrupled worldwide in under four decades to 422 million, and the condition is fast becoming a major problem in poorer countries, a World Health Organization study says.

Even in poorest settings, governments must ensure people are able to make healthy choices, WHO head says

The number of adults withdiabetes has quadrupled worldwide in under four decades to 422million, and the condition is fast becoming a major problem inpoorer countries, a World Health Organization study showed onWednesday.

In one of the largest studies to date of diabetes trends,the researchers said aging populations and rising levels ofobesity across the world mean diabetes is becoming "a definingissue for global public health."

Type 2 diabetes is a long-term condition characterized byinsulin resistance. Patients can manage their diabetes with
medication and diet, but the disease is often life-long and is amajor cause of blindness, kidney failure, heart attacks, strokeand lower limb amputation.

"Obesity is the most important risk factor for Type 2diabetes and our attempts to control rising rates of obesityhave so far not proved successful," said Majid Ezzati, aprofessor at Imperial College London who led the WHO research.

Published in The Lancet journal ahead of the United NationsWorld Health Day on April 7, the study used data from 4.4
million adults in different world regions to estimateage-adjusted diabetes prevalence for 200 countries.

It found that between 1980 and 2014, diabetes has becomemore common among men than women, and rates of diabetes rosesignificantly in many low and middle income countries, includingChina, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, Egypt and Mexico.

"If we are to make any headway in halting the rise indiabetes, we need to rethink our daily lives: to eat healthily,be physically active, and avoid excessive weight gain," Dr.Margaret Chan, the WHO's director-general,saidin a statement from the WHO's Geneva headquarters.

"Even in the poorest settings, governments must ensure thatpeople are able to make these healthy choices and that healthsystems are able to diagnose and treat people with diabetes."

The study found that northwestern Europe has the lowestrates of diabetes among women and men.

"The lack of rise of diabetes in Western European countries and some other developed countries, including Canada, interestingly, in the recent years was quite interesting," Prof. Goodarz Danaei, co-lead author of the study and anassistant professor of global health at Harvard Chan School, said in an interview with CBC News.

No country saw any meaningful decrease in diabetesprevalence, it found.

The researchers estimated the global cost of diabetes at $825 billion US dollars per year. In Canada in 2014, the costs to the health system directly was $8 billion US,Danaei said.

Dr.JanHux, the chief science officer at the Canadian Diabetes Association, said in this country, people with diabetes account for:

  • 30%of strokes.
  • 40% of heart attacks.
  • 50% of kidney failure requiring dialysis.
  • 70% of amputations.

"I have had patients tell me, 'Oh doctor, I don't have diabetes. I just have a little sugar.' This is far more than a little sugar if you look at the downstream consequences," Hux said.

Hux said the biggest concern is thatrates of diabetes are nowbecoming unsustainablein countries that can't afford tomanage it.

The largest increases in diabetes rates were in Pacificisland nations, followed by the Middle East and North Africa, incountries like Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

Danaeisaid the increases there werebecause of the "usual offenders:"higher intakes of energy dense-food such as fried starches, as well as lower physical activity amongpeople who are moving to urban areas and adopting sedentary lifestyles.

The data also showed that half of adults with diabetes in2014 lived in five countries China, India, the United States
Brazil and Indonesia. Rates more than doubled for men in Indiaand China between 1980 and 2014.

With files from CBC News