Madras Diabetes Research Foundation & Dr. Mohan's Diabetes Specialities Centre, ICMR Centre for Advanced Research on Diabetes, Chennai, India.
Madras Diabetes Research Foundation & Dr. Mohan's Diabetes Specialities Centre, ICMR Centre for Advanced Research on Diabetes, Chennai, India.
J Diabetes Complications. 2021 Dec;35(12):108051. doi: 10.1016/j.jdiacomp.2021.108051. Epub 2021 Sep 25.
To assess the effect of migration (rural-to-urban and vice versa) on prevalence of diabetes and metabolic disorders in Asian Indians participating in the Indian Council of Medical Research-India Diabetes (ICMR-INDIAB) study.
The ICMR-INDIAB study is a national study on diabetes and associated cardiometabolic disorders in individuals aged ≥20 years from 28 states and 2 union territories of India. Individuals who moved to a different place from their place of birth and had resided in the new location for at least one year were considered as migrants. Anthropometric measurements, blood pressure estimation and a capillary oral glucose tolerance test were performed.
Of the 113,043 participants, 66.4% were non-migrant rural dwellers, 19.4% non-migrant urban dwellers, 8.4% rural-urban migrants, 3.8% multiple migrants and 2.0% urban-rural migrants. Weighted prevalence of diabetes was highest in rural-urban migrants followed by urban dwellers, urban-rural migrants and rural dwellers [14.7%, 13.2%, 12.7% and 7.7% respectively (p < 0.001)]. Rural-urban migrants had highest prevalence of abdominal obesity (50.5%) compared to the other three groups. The risk for diabetes was 1.9 times higher in rural-urban migrants than among rural dwellers. Five risk factors [hypertension, abdominal and generalized obesity, physical inactivity and low fruit and vegetable intake] together explained 69.8% (partial population attributable risk) of diabetes among rural-urban migrants and 66.4% among non-migrant urban dwellers.
Rural-to-urban migration is associated with increased risk of developing diabetes and other cardiometabolic abnormalities. Adoption of healthier lifestyle patterns among migrants could help prevent/delay onset of these abnormalities in this population.
评估移民(从农村到城市和反之亦然)对参与印度医学研究委员会-印度糖尿病(ICMR-INDIAB)研究的印度裔人群中糖尿病和代谢紊乱患病率的影响。
ICMR-INDIAB 研究是一项针对印度 28 个邦和 2 个联邦属地 20 岁及以上个体的糖尿病和相关心血管代谢疾病的全国性研究。从出生地迁移到另一个地方并在新地点居住至少一年的个体被视为移民。进行了人体测量测量、血压估计和毛细血管口服葡萄糖耐量试验。
在 113043 名参与者中,66.4%是非移民农村居民,19.4%是非移民城市居民,8.4%是城乡移民,3.8%是多次移民,2.0%是城市-农村移民。加权糖尿病患病率最高的是城乡移民,其次是城市居民、城乡移民和农村居民[分别为 14.7%、13.2%、12.7%和 7.7%(p<0.001)]。城乡移民中腹部肥胖的患病率最高(50.5%),高于其他三组。与农村居民相比,城乡移民患糖尿病的风险高 1.9 倍。五种危险因素[高血压、腹部和全身肥胖、身体活动不足以及水果和蔬菜摄入低]共同解释了城乡移民中 69.8%(部分人群归因风险)的糖尿病和非移民城市居民中 66.4%的糖尿病。
从农村到城市的迁移与患糖尿病和其他心血管代谢异常的风险增加有关。移民中采用更健康的生活方式模式可能有助于预防/延迟该人群这些异常的发生。