
Diabetes mellitus: Trends in northern India
Author(s) -
Manish Gutch,
Syed Mohd Razi,
Sukriti Kumar,
Keshav Kumar Gupta
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
indian journal of endocrinology and metabolism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.456
H-Index - 28
eISSN - 2230-9500
pISSN - 2230-8210
DOI - 10.4103/2230-8210.139219
Subject(s) - medicine , diabetes mellitus , dyslipidemia , westernization , pandemic , metropolitan area , environmental health , disease , covid-19 , economic growth , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , economics , modernization theory , endocrinology
Diabetes mellitus is becoming a global health issue with more than 80% diabetics living in developing countries. India accounts for 62.4 million diabetics (2011). Indian Council of Medical Research India Diabetes Study (ICMR-INDIAB) study showed highest weighted prevalence rate in the north India among all studied regions. Diabetes in north India has many peculiarities in all aspects from risk factors to control programmers. North Indians are becoming more prone for diabetes and dyslipidemia because rapid westernization of living style and diet due rapid migration to metropolitan cities for employment. North Indian diabetes is plagued with gender bias against females, poor quality of health services, myths, and lack of disease awareness compounded with small number of prevention and awareness programmers that too are immature to counteract the growing pandemic.