Thursday, October 27, 2005 1:16 AM
by
will
The Disease You Ought to Worry About (Not Bird Flu)
There was an interesting
contributed article in the
Asia Times Online (spotted via
China Digital Times)
about a disease that poses a very serious threat to Asia. Not bird flu
(still mostly affecting birds it turns out, despite apocalyptic media
coverage) or HIV/AIDS or even the dreaded pig-eliminating Strep suis,
but diabetes.
Diabetes as a topic comes up from time to time, and then tends to slip
below the radar. As a non-communicable disease, it doesn't seem to
arouse peoples' fear the same way that, well, the specter of bird flu
is. It's the traffic accident of diseases. You know it's there, and
it's killing people or making their lives difficult, but, hey, it won't
happen to me.
The author of this piece, Professor Paul Zimmet, tries to put diabetes back into perspective:
In the next decade, the number of global lives
claimed by diabetes is set to grow by a quarter,
driven by rising obesity and inactivity. It could
cause the first life-expectancy reduction in more
than 200 years. And nowhere is the problem more
serious than in Asia.
In Asia there are
now 90 million people with diabetes. Asia is home
to four of the world's five largest diabetic
populations - India, 33 million people with
diabetes; China, 23 million; Pakistan, 9 million;
and Japan, 7 million. The United States is also in
the top five with an estimated 18 million
suffering from the disease.
Globally the
WHO estimates the global diabetes population will
grow to more than 200 million in 2010 and 330
million in 2025. The burden in Asia will increase
- in less than a decade 60% of all diabetes cases
globally will be owned by Asia.
Asia
should be in a state of panic. While diabetes can
be treated, with limited access to treatments a
majority of people affected will die prematurely.
Even with treatments diabetes kills people
prematurely, as well as robs them of their quality
of life, and puts significant strain on resources.
My wife is a professional nutritionist and she is fairly appalled by
the way people eat, not just here in Beijing (where the food, while
often tasty, is not what anyone would describe as "healthy"), but also
in her home country of Singapore. Widespread consumption of highly
refined starches, a taste for sweets and a decreasing level of physical
activity are all adding up to a spreading problem, if you will.
According to the
WHO's figures,
about 10% of Singapore's population was afflicted in 2000. If accurate,
that's pretty shocking. China is big by numbers due to its population
size, but falls a ways short of leage-table leader India and perennial
strong-finishers the US in terms of percentage of the population. That
might change as wealth spreads in China, bringing such blessings of
modern civilization as Pizza Hut, KFC and the cute-but-sinister Bread
Talk (a Singaporean export specializing in sugary, fluffy breads and
gaining popularity in Beijing).
It's an issue that hits close to home for my wife, who's father has
adult-onset diabetes, and who's grandmother was plagued by serious
complications from the same. Now poor diet and exercise habits are
making type-2 diabetes a disease of middle adulthood and even
childhood, and no longer just an affliction of elderly.
While I think it's dangerous rhetorical ground to argue about which
disease is more serious --AIDS transmissibility and ability to wipe out
the most productive members of a society make it still a disease to be
taken with the utmost seriousness-- its good to keep diabetes from
slipping below the radar. Especially as it transforms from an
affliction of the elderly and unlucky into a lifestyle disease.
Worth a read.*
*Update: But outed as PR by Zhuanjia. See comments.