Effect of internal migration on diabetes and metabolic abnormalities in India - The ICMR-INDIAB study

Pradeepa, R and Subashini, R and Venkatesan, U and Ningombam, Somorjit and Purty, Anil and John, Mary and Reang, Taranga and Luaia, Rosang and Tripathy, Saroj Kumar and Modi, Sagar and Mokta, Jatinder Kumar and Desai, Ankush and Dash, K and Deepa, M and Nirmal, E and Unnikrishnan, R and Anjana, R M and Kaur, T and Dhaliwal, R S and Mohan, V (2021) Effect of internal migration on diabetes and metabolic abnormalities in India - The ICMR-INDIAB study. Journal of Diabetes and its Complications, 35 (12). p. 108051. ISSN 10568727

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Abstract

Aims: 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. Materials and methods: 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. Results: 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. Conclusions: 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.

Item Type:Article
Official URL/DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jdiacomp.2021.108051
Uncontrolled Keywords:Diabetes; Hypertension; INDIAB; India; Migration; Obesity
Subjects:Diabetes Epidemiology
Divisions:Department of Epidemiology
Department of Diabetology
ID Code:1288
Deposited By:surendar radha
Deposited On:26 Feb 2022 12:13
Last Modified:26 Feb 2022 12:13

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