City migrants more prone to diabetes
Villagers Moving To Urban
Areas For Jobs More likely To Be Obese, Diabetic Than Siblings
Left Behind: Study
New
Delhi: The promise of a better life seems to have come with a
heavy price with mass migration in India seen to be fuelling the
country’s diabetes epidemic.
Scientists from London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine, AIIMS, University of Bristol and Centre for Chronic
Diseases Control in Delhi found that people moving from villages
to cities in India in search of work were more likely to end up
obese and suffer from diabetes compared to their siblings who
stayed behind. After studying 6,510 people from north, central
and south India, researchers said that half of the migrants who
moved to urban locales packed on an additional 7 kg by the tenth
year of their relocation. This excessive weight gain that
substantially increased risks of diabetes was because of “eating
more calories than they needed for the energy burnt up in
physical activity”. Migrants were found to eat more fat than
rural people. And, therefore, this community and urban
participants were three to four times more likely to be obese
than their rural counterparts and more than two times more
likely to be diabetic.
Migrants were almost twice more likely to have hypertension
and have higher blood sugar than villagers. To examine how
migration impacted on obesity and diabetes in India, British and
Indian scientists interviewed rural migrants and their spouses
working in urban factories. Each migrant worker or spouse asked
a sibling still living in the rural area from where they hailed
to join the study. Nonmigrant factory workers and their siblings
from urban areas were also recruited. Participants answered
questions about their diet and physical activity and had their
blood sugar and body mass index measured.
Urbanites and migrants had similar levels of obesity (41.9%
and 37.8% respectively), in comparison with 19% in rural areas.
Diabetes also affected urban and migrant men equally (13.5% and
14.3% respectively) compared with 6.2% in rural men. The pattern
of obesity and diabetes were similar in women.
Lead investigator Shah Ebrahim, director of the South Asia
Network for Chronic Disease in New Delhi, said, “This increase
of hypertension, diabetes and obesity in migrant populations
compared to that of their families still living in rural India
is because they eat more of everything as they have a higher
expendable income.” Researchers made some interesting points.
They found that it wasn’t a western diet that was to blame for
this rise in diabetes rates but just ordinary everyday Indian
food.
President of Public Health Foundation of India (PHFI) Dr K S
Reddy said, “This study makes a vital finding—migrants show
diabetes and obesity rates which are intermediate (just between
rates of permanent urban residents and rural residents.) This
means that migrants acquire a risk which is between place of
origin and place of adoption. Therefore, now we know that their
next generation will manifest the total urban risk.” Dr Reddy
added, “The study proves that influence of urbanisation and
change of living habits have far greater influence than genetic
susceptibility as a determinant of risk of acquiring or
manifesting diabetes.
While urbanisation is likely to be a progressive phenomenon,
we need to ensure that healthy living habits are promoted and
supported so that rates of diabetes do not rise.”
Diabetes has increased in urban areas of India from 5% to
15% between 1984 and 2004. In rural India, it is around 6%. At
present, India is home to over 50 lakh diabetics.
FAT FACTS
After studying 6,510 people from north, central and south India,
Indian and UK experts found that half of the migrants who moved
to urban areas packed on an extra 7 kg by the tenth year of
their relocation. This weight gain that increased the risk of
diabetes is because of eating more calories than needed
Migrants were three to four times more likely to be obese than
their rural counterparts and more than two times more likely to
be diabetic
Migrants were almost twice more likely to have hypertension
and have higher blood sugar than villagers
Diabetes has increased in urban areas of India from 5% to 15%
between 1984 and 2004. In rural India, it is around 6%.
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