Affiliations 

  • 1 Prof. J S Cheah. University Dept of Medicine (1), Singapore General Hospital, Outram Road, Singapore 0316
Med J Malaysia, 1982 Jun;37(2):141-9.
PMID: 7132833

Abstract

A country-wide diabetic survey of the population (age 15 years and above) of Singapore shows that the prevalence of diabetes mellitus in Singapore is 1.99 percent. It is commoner in males (2.36 percent) than in females (1.64 percent). The prevalence of diabetes in the age group 15-39 years is only 0.40 percent and in the age group 40 years and older it is 5.08 percent. The prevalence of diabetes in Indians (6.07 percent) is significantly higher than that in Malays (2.43 percent) and Chinese (1.55 percent). Indian diabetics have an insignifi"cantly higher incidence of positive family of diabetes (12.7 percent) than Malays (10.9 percent) and Chinese (6.5 percent). Obesity was commoner in Malay diabetics (67.4 percent) than in Chinese diabetics (41.6 percent) and Indian diabetics (35.7 percent). The survey shows that 40.4 percent of the diabetics are known while 59.6 percent of the diabetics are newly diagnosed. The majority of the diabetics are treated with oral hypoglycaemic drugs (71.5 percent) and only 4.8 percent are receiving insulin injections. A mong the female diabetics, 63.0 percent have 4 or more pregnancies and large babies at birth are recorded in 12.3 percent. In the newly diagnosed diabetics, 64.3 percent have no symptoms. The complications of the diabetics are hypertension (26.8 percent), nephropathy (9.8 percent), retinopathy (8.5 percent), coronary heart disease (6.1 percent), skin infection (4.6 percent) and neuropathy (3.3 percent). The high prevalence of diabetes among the Indians is likely to be due to a genetic predisposition coupled with an environmental factor (obesity), although this hypothesis is not conclusively demonstrated by the present study.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.