The Pak Banker

The diabetes burden

- Tabinda Ashraf Shahid

While the pandemic might have heightened peoples' awareness of communicab­le and infectious diseases, the grave risks posed by non-communicab­le diseases (NCDs) remain as potent as ever.

This threat is further aggravated in lowerand middle-income and developing countries, where living and working conditions remain less than ideal for a plethora of reasons.

As the saying goes, health is wealth: it is only natural, and logical, that countries with robust economies would have healthier population­s mostly on account of effective healthcare systems in place. The physical and mental health of any

individual is key in ascertaini­ng their productivi­ty and longevity. In fact, the World Bank suggests that better health conditions in developed countries can make them up to 50 per cent more fiscally productive than developing economies that usually have weaker healthcare systems.

Though infectious diseases pose grave challenges to the global economic order, as proved by Covid-19, it is NCDs- which often remain undetected - which still comprise the major portion of the total disease burden of the world, especially in low- or middle-income countries where more than half the world's population resides.

In this regard, Asia remains one of the top contributo­rs to the world's GDP with prospects of driving as much as 60pc of global growth by 2030. Yet the region, especially South Asia, bears one of the highest socioecono­mic costs of the non-communicab­le disease burden. Around 8.5 million people die each year in South Asia from NCDs. According to the World Health Organisati­on, NCDs are a key threat to South Asian economies.

One of the diseases that affects a large fraction of the South Asian population is type 2 diabetes, or diabetes mellitus, where the body's response to the blood-sugar-regulating hormone insulin is compromise­d.

The country most affected by and at risk from diabetes in South Asia is Pakistan, where according to a recent study published in The Lancet, 33m people suffer from type 2 diabetes the thirdhighe­st diabetes prevalence in the world - while 11m more have impaired glucose tolerance. In addition to this, it is estimated that between 8.9m cases remain undiagnose­d in the country.

Diabetes mellitus is the most common form of diabetes across the world. More than 95pc of worldwide diabetes cases are said to be of type 2 variant, states WHO.

Under it, the body becomes resistant to insulin and is, therefore, unable to self-regulate blood sugar levels. Its major risk factors include physical inactivity, poor eating habits, stress, and obesity among others, very common in urban population­s across Pakistan and the rest of South Asia.

This is not all; diabetes mellitus increases the body's susceptibi­lity to other serious illnesses, including renal failure, heart disease, and increased susceptibi­lity to outside infections such as Covid-19. Over time, if not managed, diabetes often becomes debilitati­ng as it acts as a force multiplier for other chronic illnesses.

World Diabetes Day is observed on (Nov 14) every year to spread awareness and educate people about this disease and arrest its spread in growing population­s.

The theme for 2021-23 is "access to diabetes care", a slogan that emphasises the need for making policies more conducive toward diabetes management.

To keep more people from developing it, it is essential that predisposi­tion towards diabetes is caught early and managed by lifestyle alternatio­ns. In Pakistan, the government should allow every citizen to get tested at least once a year according to their individual risk factors (any one of the three internatio­nally-recognised biochemica­l tests), to ascertain their de gree of glucose im p airment and pre v ent future com plications.

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