Asian and Afro-Caribbean Britons have double the risk of type 2 diabetes

The researchers, led by Nish Chaturvedi, professor of clinical epidemiology at Imperial College London, found that carrying excess fat around the trunk or middle of the body in mid-life, together with increased insulin resistance, explained why South Asian, African, and Afro-Caribbean women were mor...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMJ (Online) 2012-09, Vol.345 (sep11 3), p.e6135-e6135
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description The researchers, led by Nish Chaturvedi, professor of clinical epidemiology at Imperial College London, found that carrying excess fat around the trunk or middle of the body in mid-life, together with increased insulin resistance, explained why South Asian, African, and Afro-Caribbean women were more at risk of developing diabetes than British European women. The NHS health check programme invites all patients aged 40-74 for a five yearly risk assessment for cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, and diabetes. [...]guidance published in July by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence encouraged screening of high risk groups, including the ethnic minority groups included in the SABRE study, from the age of 25.
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source MEDLINE; BMJ Journals - NESLi2; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects African Continental Ancestry Group
Caribbean Region - ethnology
Diabetes
Diabetes mellitus
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 - ethnology
European Continental Ancestry Group
Humans
India - ethnology
Insulin resistance
Minority & ethnic groups
Risk
United Kingdom - epidemiology
title Asian and Afro-Caribbean Britons have double the risk of type 2 diabetes
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