Urban rural differences in prevalence of self-reported diabetes in India- The WHO-ICMR Indian NCD risk factor surveillance

Mohan, Viswanathan ; Mathur, Prashant ; Deepa, Raj ; Deepa, Mohan ; Shukla, D. K. ; Menon, Geetha R. ; Anand, Krishnan ; Desai, Nimesh G. ; Joshi, Prashant P. ; Mahanta, J. ; Thankappan, K. R. ; Shah, Bela (2008) Urban rural differences in prevalence of self-reported diabetes in India- The WHO-ICMR Indian NCD risk factor surveillance Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice, 80 (1). pp. 159-168. ISSN 0168-8227

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Official URL: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.diabres.2007.11.018

Abstract

Recent reports show strikingly high prevalence of diabetes among urban Asian Indians; however, there are very few studies comparing urban, peri-urban and rural prevalence rates of diabetes and their risk factors at the national level. This study is a part of the national non-communicable diseases (NCD) risk factor surveillance conducted in different geographical locations (North, South, East, West/Central) in India between April 2003 and March 2005. A total of 44,523 individuals (age: 15-64 years) inclusive of 15,239 from urban, 15,760 from peri-urban/slum and 13,524 from rural areas were recruited. Major risk factors were studied using modified WHO STEPS approach. Diabetes was diagnosed based on self-reported diabetes diagnosed by a physician. The lowest prevalence of self-reported diabetes was recorded in rural (3.1%) followed by peri-urban/slum (3.2%) and the highest in urban areas (7.3%, odds ratio (OR) for urban areas: 2.48, 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.21-2.79, p<0.001). Urban residents with abdominal obesity and sedentary activity had the highest prevalence of self-reported diabetes (11.3%) while rural residents without abdominal obesity performing vigorous activity had the lowest prevalence (0.7%). In conclusion, this nation-wide NCD risk factor surveillance study shows that the prevalence of self-reported diabetes is higher in urban, intermediate in peri-urban and lowest in rural areas. Urban residence, abdominal obesity and physical inactivity are the risk factors associated with diabetes in this study.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Elsevier Science.
Keywords:Self-reported Diabetes; Risk Factors; India; Surveillance; Urban; Rural; Peri-urban; Non-communicable Diseases; Asian Indians; South Asians
ID Code:79074
Deposited On:24 Jan 2012 07:28
Last Modified:24 Jan 2012 07:28

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