Lifestyle and demographic changes have led to diabetes becoming increasingly prevalent in rich and poor countries alike. In this video, SEBASTIAN VOLLMER assesses the global economic burden of diabetes. Going beyond previous studies in its recognition of the differing costs relating to such chronic conditions in both high and low-income countries, the research concludes that the economic burden of diabetes amounts to almost 2% of global GDP. With further work providing insight into how costs are likely to develop in the coming decades, Vollmer’s research helps policymakers to identify ways to reduce the economic burden of diabetes.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21036/LTPUB10651
Institution
University of Göttingen (Georg-August-Universität Göttingen)
Founded in 1737, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen is a research university of international renown with strong focuses in research-led teaching. The University is distinguished by the rich diversity of its subject spectrum particularly in the humanities, its excellent facilities for the pursuit of scientific research, and the outstanding quality of the areas that define its profile. From 2007 to 2012 Georg-August-Universität Göttingen was rewarded funding from the Initiative of Excellence of the German Federal and State Governments with its institutional strategy for the future entitled “Göttingen.Tradition – Innovation – Autonomy”. The University was able to realise all measures of the concept. Now Göttingen University develops the successfully established measures further to continously advance the University’s positive developments in research and teaching. ( Source )
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Original publication
The Global Economic Burden of Diabetes in Adults Aged 20–79 Years: A Cost-of-Illness Study
The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology
Published in 2017
Diabetes and Hypertension in India: A Nationally Representative Study of 1.3 Million Adults
JAMA Internal Medicine
Published in 2018
Global Economic Burden of Diabetes in Adults: Projections from 2015 to 2030
Diabetes care
Published in 2018
Geographic and Sociodemographic Variation of Cardiovascular Disease Risk in India: A Cross-sectional Study of 797,540 Adults
PLoS Medicine
Published in 2018
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