Kunsayin kopiyiwatqan simizlik we diyabit kisili Asiyagha Tehdit
Ilip Kelmekte
Asiyada simizlik we Diaybit Kisili keng dahirde tarqalghan bolup,
ularning kopiyish nisbiti yenila tiz bolmaqta. Jungguda Diyabit
kisili 1980-yilidin 1996-yilighiche 3 hesse kopyegen. 2025-yiligha
barghanda Junggudiki Diyabit kisilige giriptar bolghanlarning sani
20 miliyungha yitidiken.
Epidemic obesity and diabetes threatens Asia
Friday, November 10, 2006
By Megan Rauscher
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - In Asia, obesity and type 2 diabetes has
reached epidemic proportions and the rate of increase shows no signs
of slowing, doctors report in The Lancet this week.
The rate at which type 2 diabetes has increased throughout Asia
during the past three decades and the likelihood that it will
continue to increase at this rate, "provide substantial grounds for
concern," they write.
While the US has seen a doubling in the prevalence of type 2
diabetes (from 4% to 8% of the population) during the past 40 years,
increases in newly developed and developing countries have been even
more dramatic.
In Chinese adults, the prevalence tripled between 1980 and 1996,
from roughly 1% to 3.2%.
"The data from the Indian subcontinent are equally disconcerting,
and the same trend can be seen in other countries in the region,"
warn Dr. Kun-Ho Yoon from Kangnam St. Mary's Hospital, Seoul, Korea
and colleagues.
By 2025, India and China could each have 20 million people affected
by diabetes. In Korea, Indonesia, and Thailand, rates of type 2
diabetes have increased three- to five-fold in the past 30 years.
"The health consequences of this epidemic threaten to overwhelm
health-care systems in the region (and) urgent action is needed,"
state the authors.
Studies suggests that people in Asia tend to develop diabetes at a
younger age and lower weight, suffer longer with chronic
complications of the disease, and die sooner than those in developed
countries.
The epidemic of obesity and type 2 diabetes, Yoon warned in comments
to Reuters Health, "might happen at a quite early stage of economic
development of Asian countries, so nationwide preventive and
appropriate management strategies have to be built, even in the low
income countries."
Rapidly changing behavioral patterns of young Asians (fast food and
more sedentary lifestyle) are partly to blame for the epidemic.
Between 1985 and 2000, China saw a 28-fold increase in the
proportion of children aged 7 to 18 years who were obese and
overweight.
Promoting a change in lifestyle is "the first step" in combating
obesity and type 2 diabetes in Asia, according to the authors.
SOURCE: The Lancet, November 11, 2006.
Reuters Health