Cost of diabetes hits $825 billion a year: study

06 Apr 2016

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The global cost of diabetes is now 825 billion dollars per year, according to the largest ever study of diabetes levels across the world, which reveals half the global population of diabetics reside in China, India, USA, Brazil and Indonesia.

The research, which was led by scientists from Imperial College London, and involved Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, the World Health Organization and nearly 500 researchers across the globe, incorporated data from 4.4 million adults in most of the world's countries. The research team has also created interactive maps and other visuals that show the data for each country, and how they compare to each other.

The study, published in the journal The Lancet, compared diabetes levels among adult men and women from 1980 to 2014. Diabetes results in a person being unable to regulate levels of sugar in their blood, and increases the risk of heart and kidney disease, vision loss, and amputations.

The team adjusted their results to account for diabetes becoming more common as a person ages and that some countries have an older population. Using age-adjusted figures, they found the incidence of diabetes in men across the world has more than doubled - from 4.3 per cent in 1980 to 9 per cent in 2014 - after adjusting for the effect of ageing. Meanwhile diabetes among women has risen from 5 per cent in 1980 to 7.9 per cent in 2014.

This rise translates as 422 million adults in the world with diabetes in 2014 - which has nearly quadrupled since 1980 (108 million).

The study follows previous work by the same Wellcome Trust-funded team, which studied global obesity levels, and was published in The Lancet last week.

The data published today also reveals the age-adjusted levels of diabetes in 2014 were lowest in some countries in northwestern Europe, where around 4 per cent of women and 6 per cent of men have diabetes. The prevalence of diabetes was highest in Polynesia and Micronesia, where more than one in five adults has the condition.

Overall, low- and middle-income countries had the largest rise in diabetes levels over the 34-year period.

The team also calculated the annual cost of diabetes - which included the cost of treating and managing the disease and its complications, such as limb amputations. This was calculated in International Dollars. The global cost was 825 billion dollars per year, with the largest cost to individual countries being in China ($170 billion), the USA ($105 billion) and India ($73 billion). The authors add that the calculation did not include work days lost due to diabetes, which would make the costs far greater if incorporated.

The study also found that:

  • Diabetes has increased most dramatically in Pacific island nations and in the Middle East and North Africa region, which now have the highest diabetes levels in the world. In Polynesia and Micronesia, where prevalence is highest, more than one in five adults have diabetes. In Nauru and American Samoa, the number is nearly one in every three men and women.
  • Among high-income countries, the rise in diabetes was relatively small in western Europe, especially among women. Diabetes was lowest in Switzerland, Austria, Denmark, Belgium, and the Netherlands.
  • After age-adjustment, 6.6 per cent of men and 4.9 per cent of women in the UK in 2014 had diabetes.  UK men were 169th in the world (out of 200) in terms of diabetes prevalence, and 33rd in Europe (out of 43 nations). In comparison, UK women were 181st in the world, and 29th in Europe.
  • In the USA in 2014, 8.2 per cent of men and 6.4 per cent of women had diabetes, making US rank 114th for men and 146th for women in the world. The number of US men with diabetes has increased by more than two thirds since 1980, when the number was 4.7 per cent. The figure for women in 1980 was 4.3 per cent.
  • One half of the 422 million adults with diabetes in 2014 lived in five countries: China, India, USA, Brazil and Indonesia.
  • If current trends continue, over 700 million adults worldwide would be affected with diabetes by 2025.

The study did not differentiate between type one and type two diabetes, as this wasn't included in most of the raw data. At least 85-90 per cent of diabetes cases are type two.

Professor Majid Ezzati, senior author of the study, from the School of Public Health at Imperial College London, said: "This is the first time we have had such a complete global picture about diabetes - and the data reveals the disease has reached levels that can bankrupt some countries' health systems. The enormous cost of this disease - to both governments and individuals - could otherwise go towards life essentials such as food and education."

He added that, until we find effective ways of addressing the global obesity epidemic, focusing on individuals who are at high risk of the condition is key to tackling the diabetes crisis.

"We need financially accessible and effective health systems that can highlight those at high risk of diabetes or at pre-diabetes stage. Healthcare staff can then deliver medication and lifestyle advice to delay or even prevent the onset of the condition, as has been done in some countries in western Europe"

Professor Goodarz Danaei, co-lead author of the study from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health said: "The most important risk factor for diabetes is obesity. Yet global obesity levels are soaring out of control."

Professor Danaei also added that genetics and foetal and early life conditions may play a role in why some countries seem to have much higher rates of diabetes: "There is increasing evidence that the interaction of genes and the environment plays a role in diabetes. For example, certain genotypes may increase the risk of diabetes especially in people with unhealthy lifestyles. In addition, inadequate nutrition during pregnancy and in early life may increase the risk of diabetes later in life. Therefore, long-term diabetes prevention should address nutrition in every stage of life."

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