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International UCL-led study prompts rethink on the rise of diabetes in cities

16 November 2015

New research led by UCL for the Cities Changing Diabetes partnership shows socio-cultural factors including time pressure, commuting time and where you live play significant roles in diabetes vulnerability.

Cities Changing Diabetes

Findings from the world's largest-ever study of urban diabetes - in five cities which together are home to 60 million people - suggest cities must reconsider public health and city planning strategies to address the rise of the condition

Over 400 million people worldwide have diabetes, more than two thirds of whom live in cities. Partnership initiator Novo Nordisk has pledged to invest over 20 million USD of expert resource and research funds in Cities Changing Diabetes by 2020

The research findings will be presented to delegates at an international Summit in Copenhagen on Monday 16 November where it will also be announced that in 2016, Vancouver and Johannesburg will join Mexico City, Shanghai, Tianjin, Copenhagen, and Houston as partner cities.

The research, led by Professor David Napier (UCL Anthropology), challenges current scientific understanding of the rapid rise of diabetes in cities. The findings suggest that in cities around the world, social and cultural factors play a far more important role in the spread of the epidemic than previously thought.

Cities Changing Diabetes

The year-long study for Cities Changing Diabetes, a unique public-private-academic partnership, sought to better understand what makes people vulnerable to type 2 diabetes in cities in order to inform solutions for one of the most pressing modern-day public health challenges. To explore this complex issue, more than 550 interviews were undertaken with at-risk and diagnosed people in five major cities - Copenhagen, Houston, Mexico City, Shanghai and Tianjin.

Professor Napier Said: "By largely focusing on biomedical risk factors for diabetes, traditional research has not adequately accounted for the impact of social and cultural drivers of disease. Our pioneering research will enable cities worldwide to help populations adapt to lifestyles that make them less vulnerable to diabetes."

The study found that diabetes vulnerability in cities is linked to a complex mix of social and cultural factors - responsible for both putting people at greater initial risk and subsequently making them less likely to be diagnosed, receive treatment and maintain good health. The identified social factors included financial, geographical, resource and time constraints while cultural determinants included the perception of body size and health and deep-seated traditions.

Dr Armando Ahued Ortega, Minister of Health of Mexico City, said: "The insights we have gained from the Cities Changing Diabetes research have fundamentally changed the way we think about diabetes in our city. This new understanding of sociocultural risk factors will guide the development of increasingly efficient and targeted public health policies to support the health and wellbeing of our citizens."

Key findings from study cities

In Houston, the traditional notion of disadvantage being equal to vulnerability is no longer the rule and both people with and without financial constraints may be vulnerable to diabetes

  •  In Mexico City, gender roles may contribute to increased vulnerability as women neglect their own health to avoid being seen as burdensome
  •  In Copenhagen, diabetes is often not highest in a person's hierarchy of need, given many other social and health issues such as unemployment, financial difficulties and loneliness
  •  In Shanghai, the cultural trend for the denial of hardship was seen to prevent people with diabetes from seeking help from friends, family and healthcare professionals
  •  In Tianjin, people with diabetes reported a wide range of causes of the condition including poor food choices, overworking and poor mental health

Prompted by the findings, Novo Nordisk has pledged to support the fight against urban diabetes via the investment of 20 million USD of expert resource and research funds by 2020.

Commenting on the promise, Lars Rebien Sørensen, president and chief executive, Novo Nordisk said: "We have a longstanding commitment to provide more than just pharmaceuticals to the fight against diabetes. Research of this nature illustrates precisely why we initiated Cities Changing Diabetes - to fundamentally change the trajectory of the disease through targeted actions informed by new understanding."

Partnership

The Cities Changing Diabetes partnership has three distinct but interconnecting phases - mapping, sharing and action. With the initial mapping phase now complete, the Copenhagen Summit meeting will see 250 expert delegates from around the world come together to discuss the findings and discuss solutions to tackle diabetes in cities.

In the longer-term, the partnership aims to tackle the rise of diabetes in cities around the world via the sharing of insights and knowledge of participants. In 2016, Vancouver and Johannesburg will become the latest cities to join the programme and contribute to the international pool of evidence.

Cities Changing Diabetes is a partnership programme to address the urban diabetes challenge. Initiated by Novo Nordisk, the programme is a response to the dramatic rise of urban diabetes and has been developed in partnership with UCL and Steno Diabetes Center, as well as a range of local partners including the diabetes/health community, city governments, academic institutions, city experts (from a variety of fields) and civil society organisations. The aim of the programme is to map the problem, share solutions and drive concrete action to fight the diabetes challenge in the big cities around the world.

UCL's participation was arranged through UCL Consultants, which provides academic consultancy services drawing on the university's world-class expertise across a wide range of disciplines, to help solve the many challenges faced by society and businesses today.

Source: Cities Changing Diabetes

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