Diabetes Cases Will Double to 1.3 billion by 2050, Report Predicts
The number of people suffering from diabetes worldwide will more than double to 1.3 billion by 2050, report from a research carried out at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation has revealed.
According to the report published in the Lancet journal, the spike will be driven by structural racism and gaping inequality between countries.
It further predicted that every country on the globe will see an increase in the number of patients with chronic disease, according to the most comprehensive analysis of global data projecting out to 2050.
Some 529 million people were estimated to be living with diabetes, one of the top 10 causes of death and disability.
That number, out of which 95 per cent are cases of type 2 diabetes, will top 1.3 billion in less than three decades.
High body mass index, an indication that people could be overweight, was linked to more than half of deaths and disability from diabetes.
Other factors included people’s diets, exercise, smoking and alcohol.
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Liane Ong, lead research scientist at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, and first author of one of the studies, said one factor was how diets had changed.
“Over the course of 30 years, different countries have really migrated from traditional food habits — maybe eating more fruits and vegetables, eating healthier greens — to more highly processed foods,” she told AFP.
The research also estimated that by 2045, three-quarters of adults with diabetes will live in low- and middle-income countries.
But even in wealthy countries such as the United States, diabetes rates were almost 1.5 times higher among minorities such as black, Hispanic, Asian or Native Americans, a separate Lancet study said.
Study co-author Leonard Egede, of the Medical College of Wisconsin, blamed a “cascade of widening diabetes inequity”.
“Racist policies such as residential segregation affect where people live, their access to sufficient and healthy food and health care services,” he said in a statement.
Ong said, “The challenge is that we don’t really see one type of intervention that’s going to fix everything. Instead, fighting diabetes will require long-term planning, investment and attention from countries around the globe.”
In an editorial, the Lancet said that “The world has failed to understand the social nature of diabetes and underestimated the true scale and threat the disease poses. Diabetes will be a defining disease of this century,” it added.