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World Diabetes Day 2024: India accounts for over 25% of the world’s adults with diabetes, says an alarming study published in The Lancet that expresses concern not just over the growing disease burden globally but also lagging treatment rates, especially in low- and medium-income countries. Continues below advertisement window.addEventListener("load", function() { let ad_unit_fire_time = 1000; if(ad_delay_time_abp > 0){ ad_unit_fire_time = parseInt(ad_delay_time_abp) + 500; } setTimeout(function () { googletag.

cmd.push(function() { googletag.display("div-gpt-ad-9167143-2"); }); },ad_unit_fire_time) }); According to the study — backed by the World Health Organization (WHO) and released to mark World Diabetes Day on Thursday — diabetes treatment coverage in India in 2022 was below 30% for adults aged over 30, a worrying statistic even though it marks a marginal increase over 1990.



Lack of diabetes treatment is associated with life-long complications, including amputation and heart disease. “In 2022, almost one third (133 million, 30%) of the 445 million adults aged 30 years or older with untreated diabetes lived in India, more than 50% greater than the next largest number, which was in China (78 million) because treatment coverage was higher in China (45% for women and 41% for men) than in India (28% for women and 29% for men),” the study notes. Continues below advertisement window.

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