Standardised comparison of glucose tolerance and diabetes prevalence in four African/African-Caribbean populations in Britain, Jamaica and Cameroon

1997 
To study factors promoting the emergence of diabetes in African-Caribbean (AfC) as the second largest ethnic minority in Britain and how these compare with genetically similar populations in Jamaica (origin of 80 percent AfC) and Cameroon, using the same protocol we carried out 75g glucose tolerance tests in representative community samples aged 25-74 years, by WHO criteria. As results were similar by gender, sexes are combined here. [See table] Diabetes prevalence (age-standardised) increased from Africa to the Caribbean to Europe and was highest in Manchester men. Body mass index showed a striking increase from rural to younger urban Cameroonians. Increasing NIDDM prevalence is paralleled across site by changes in nutritional and lifestyle factors, also measured using standardised methods. Even in Cameroon, prevalence approaches rates in whites in Europe.(AU)
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