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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- UN recognition of diabetes
- 2006 UN general assembly resolution on diabetes
- UN launches global campaign
- Obesity and Diabesity
- OECD predictions for overweight rates: 1970-2020
- The escalating diabetes epidemic
- Modernization and high diabetes prevalence
- Age specific prevalence of diabetes Nauru: 1994
- The 10 top nations for diabetes prevalence: 2010
- Western killer in paradise “The Age”, May 1992
- Global epidemic of type 2 diabetes prediction
- Next step in predicting global diabetes epidemic
- Diabetes prevalence increase over 22 years
- Global projections for the diabetes epidemic
- Undiagnosed diabetes
- The top 10s (number of people with diabetes)
- Increasing diabetes prevalence 1980-2002: China
- The sugar disease in India
- Prevalence of diabetes in urban India (Chennai)
- The Middle-East – world diabetes hot-spot
- Diabetes prevalence in Qatar and Australia
- Prevalence of diabetes: Japan
- Time trends in type 2 diabetes incidence
- CDC data illustrate diabetes increase (1)
- CDC data illustrate diabetes increase (2)
- Diabetes increase in rural communities
- Diabetes prevalence rates in selected nations
- Economic development / prevalence of diabetes
- Regional highlights
- Diabetes in Australia joining the global epidemic
- AusDiab mortality follow-up
- AusDiab mortality: CVD deaths
- Setting Australia sights for the future
- Australia's rates of diabetes and renal deaths
- Diabetes in indigenous Australians
- Competing "causation" of type 2 diabetes
- Type 1 diabetes in the young
- Population based diabetes register
- Childhood diabetes incidence and trends
- High incidence countries during 1990-1999
- Type 1 diabetes incidence in Finnish children (1)
- Type 1 diabetes incidence in Finnish children (2)
- Diabetes is very complicated
- Incidence of diabetes in end-stage renal failure
- Age of death: general population vs. diabetes
- Mauritius surveillance study: aims
- First study in a developing country
- Diabetes Care, 2010
- Adjusted all-cause mortality hazard ratios
- Predictors for CVD deaths
- Accelerating diabetes epidemic
- Prevention of diabetes: the new paradigm
- Genetic-environment interaction
- Epigenetics: a new paradigm for prevention
- The Dutch winter famine
- Developmental plasticity
- Diabetes in Cambodia
- Diabetes prevalence in Cambodia
- Poverty and diabetes
- Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
Topics Covered
- UN recognition of diabetes
- Obesity and Diabesity
- Modernization and high diabetes prevalence
- Age specific prevalence of diabetes: Nauru
- The 10 top nations for diabetes prevalence: 2010
- Global epidemic of type 2 diabetes prediction
- Undiagnosed diabetes
- Increasing diabetes prevalence in China
- The sugar disease in India
- The Middle-East: world diabetes hot-spot
- Diabetes prevalence in Qatar, Australia, Japan
- Diabetes increase in rural communities
- AusDiab mortality follow-up
- Diabetes in indigenous Australians
- Type 1 diabetes in the young
- Population based diabetes register
- Childhood diabetes incidence and trends
- Type 1 diabetes incidence in Finnish children
- Incidence of diabetes in end-stage renal failure
- Age of death: general population vs. diabetes
- Mauritius surveillance study
- First study in a developing country
- Predictors for CVD deaths
- Genetic-environment interaction
- Epigenetics: a new paradigm for prevention
- Developmental plasticity
- Diabetes prevalence in Cambodia
- Poverty and diabetes
Links
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Talk Citation
Zimmet, P. (2013, May 22). Diabetes - the global picture: the world’s greatest public health challenge [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 23, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/JIJM8532.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Paul Zimmet has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Diabetes - the global picture: the world’s greatest public health challenge
Published on May 22, 2013
34 min
A selection of talks on Clinical Practice
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
I'm Paul Zimmet, Director
Emeritus, the Baker IDI Heart
and Diabetes Institute
in Melbourne, Australia.
I'm an honorary president of the
International Diabetes Federation.
And the topic I wish discuss is
Diabetes-- The Global Picture,
The World's Greatest
Public Health Challenge.
0:20
In the year 2006, the United
Nations recognized diabetes
as one of the biggest public
health challenges internationally.
Ban Ki-Moon, the United Nations
Secretary General has stated,
"Diabetes is a public health
emergency in slow motion."
0:42
In the year 2006, the United
Nations General Assembly
passed a resolution
unanimously declaring diabetes
as an international health issue.
This is probably the first time
there's ever been any unanimity
at the General Assembly,
in terms of a resolution.
1:05
Last year, in fact,
in September 2011,
the United Nations held a high-level
meeting of the General Assembly
on the prevention and control
of communicable diseases.
At that meeting, the United
Nations launched a global campaign
to curb the death toll from
non-communicable diseases.
1:30
It is very clear that
obesity is driving
the escalating diabesity epidemic.
It's certainly the biggest
epidemic in human history,
in terms of
non-communicable diseases.
The term diabesity
conveys the impact
of these two epidemics,
diabetes and obesity.
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