A study led by
researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill found Chinese
teenagers have a rate of diabetes nearly four times greater than their
counterparts in the United States. The rise in the incidence of diabetes
parallels increases in cardiovascular risk, researchers say, and is the result
of a Chinese population that is growing increasingly overweight.
The study led by Barry Popkin, Ph.D., W.R. Kenan Jr.
Distinguished Professor of nutrition at UNC's Gillings School of Global Public
Health, and Chinese researchers, used data from the China Health and Nutrition
Survey (CHNS), the longest ongoing study of its kind in China. Between 1989 and
2011, the study followed more than 29,000 people in 300 communities throughout
China, with surveys conducted in 1989, 1991, 1993, 1997, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2009
and 2011. The CHNS project was a joint undertaking by the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Chinese Center for Disease Control (CCDC)
National Institute of Nutrition and Food Safety.
The findings appear online in Obesity Reviews Early
View Section and will be published in the September issue (Obesity Reviews Volume
13, Issue 9, September 2012). Obesity Reviews is an official
journal of the International Association for the Study of Obesity (IASO; http://www.iaso.org)
China has experienced unprecedented economic growth in
the past two decades, but the study finds that at the same time, China has seen
equally dramatic changes in the weight, diets and physical activity levels of
its people. UNC-CCDC researchers followed a randomly selected sample
representing 56 percent of the Chinese population in 2009 and found large
increases in overweight and cardiometabolic risk factors.
"What is unprecedented is the changes in diet,
weight and cardiovascular
risk for children age 7 and older," said Popkin. "These
estimates highlight the huge burden that China's health care system is
expected to face if nothing changes."
The UNC-CCDC team observed rates of diabetes of 1.9 percent
and pre-diabetes levels of 14.9 percent in Chinese children age 7-17.
Researchers noted that high levels of glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) were
found in the children's blood. HbA1c is a measure of the average plasma-glucose
concentration over time.
"The findings suggest a very high burden of chronic
disease risk starting at a young age, with 1.7 million Chinese children ages
7-18 having diabetes and another 27.7 million considered prediabetic,"
Popkin said. "In addition, more than one-third of children under age 18
had high levels of at least one cardiometabolic risk factor."
Comparing the Chinese data with data from the United
States based on National Health and Nutrition Survey (NHANES) results, the
authors found that diabetes and inflammation rates were higher in the Chinese
pediatric population than in the U.S. pediatric population or in other Asian
countries.
Researchers found 1.9 percent of Chinese children age 12-18
had diabetes, compared to 0.5 percent of children in the U.S. The study also
found great disparity with respect to inflammation, a key cardiovascular risk
factor; 12.1 percent of Chinese adolescents showed a high inflammation risk,
compared to 8.5 percent of adolescents in the U.S.
"The number of individuals with high levels of at
least one cardiovascular risk factor increased to 85 percent in individuals age
40 and older," said Penny Gordon-Larsen, Ph.D., professor of nutrition in
UNC's Gillings School of Global Public Health. "Of even greater concern is
the fact that we see these high levels of risk in individuals living across the
entire country – in rural and urban, as well as high and low-income areas. So
the impending health care costs and implications are immense."
These results reinforce earlier research by the authors
that found higher levels of obesity emerging in the past decade among the poor
and those living in rural areas of China.
More information: The
new study is titled "The expanding burden of cardiometabolic risk in
China: the China Health and Nutrition Survey."onlinelibrary.wile …
6.x/abstract
Provided by University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
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