Red Commissar
9th September 2013, 22:53
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/10/health/diabetes-epidemic-grows-in-china.html
Diabetes Epidemic Grows in China
By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr. (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/donald_g_jr_mcneil/index.html)
China has the world’s biggest diabetes epidemic, and it continues to get worse, according to the latest study (http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1734701) of the disease’s devastating effects on the world’s most populous country, which has risen from poverty to become an economic superpower in 30 years.
Previous studies (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/26/world/asia/26iht-diabetes.html?_r=0) had found rapidly rising rates of the disease, and the newest, published last week by The Journal of the American Medical Association, shows that China has just passed the United States: 11.6 percent of Chinese adults have the disease, compared with 11.3 percent here; in 1980, prevalence was below 1 percent.
The total — 114 million people — means China has about a third of the world’s diabetes sufferers, who are at greater risk of heart disease, stroke and kidney failure. That will put enormous strain on the country’s public health system, the authors said.
Perhaps even more alarming, the study, which involved testing almost 99,000 people, found that half had “prediabetic” blood glucose levels.
For unknown reasons, weight gain leads to Type 2 diabetes in Asians (http://aadi.joslin.org/content/diabetes-asians-asian-americans) at even lower body-mass indexes than it does in whites or blacks. The average body mass index in the study was 23.7, which is considered normal.
But obesity is increasing rapidly in China. Experts have blamed many factors: the introduction of high-calorie Western diets and fast food, more travel by car, sedentary factory jobs replacing farm labor, and families who spoil the one child that most are allowed to have.
This of course comes from a study conducted here in the US, but it is something I've noticed with a lot of developing countries with increasing amounts of diabetes diagnosis. Now whether this is because these conditions are actually being reported now (a variety of reasons can cause people to avoid categorizing themselves as diabetic, say out of fear of stigmatization), or if we can attribute it to changes in Chinese life is what people lean towards. For my part I'm partial towards the former- it really does seem like something in the diets most popular in developed countries seem to adversely contribute towards developing diabetes later on in life.
Diabetes Epidemic Grows in China
By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr. (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/donald_g_jr_mcneil/index.html)
China has the world’s biggest diabetes epidemic, and it continues to get worse, according to the latest study (http://jama.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1734701) of the disease’s devastating effects on the world’s most populous country, which has risen from poverty to become an economic superpower in 30 years.
Previous studies (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/26/world/asia/26iht-diabetes.html?_r=0) had found rapidly rising rates of the disease, and the newest, published last week by The Journal of the American Medical Association, shows that China has just passed the United States: 11.6 percent of Chinese adults have the disease, compared with 11.3 percent here; in 1980, prevalence was below 1 percent.
The total — 114 million people — means China has about a third of the world’s diabetes sufferers, who are at greater risk of heart disease, stroke and kidney failure. That will put enormous strain on the country’s public health system, the authors said.
Perhaps even more alarming, the study, which involved testing almost 99,000 people, found that half had “prediabetic” blood glucose levels.
For unknown reasons, weight gain leads to Type 2 diabetes in Asians (http://aadi.joslin.org/content/diabetes-asians-asian-americans) at even lower body-mass indexes than it does in whites or blacks. The average body mass index in the study was 23.7, which is considered normal.
But obesity is increasing rapidly in China. Experts have blamed many factors: the introduction of high-calorie Western diets and fast food, more travel by car, sedentary factory jobs replacing farm labor, and families who spoil the one child that most are allowed to have.
This of course comes from a study conducted here in the US, but it is something I've noticed with a lot of developing countries with increasing amounts of diabetes diagnosis. Now whether this is because these conditions are actually being reported now (a variety of reasons can cause people to avoid categorizing themselves as diabetic, say out of fear of stigmatization), or if we can attribute it to changes in Chinese life is what people lean towards. For my part I'm partial towards the former- it really does seem like something in the diets most popular in developed countries seem to adversely contribute towards developing diabetes later on in life.