Type 1 diabetes .. approximately 10 million infected and more than 4 million victims, despite the availability of treatments

Researchers have warned that the burden of type 1 diabetes is rising faster, amid a deadly gap in the healthcare that caused the death of millions of people early. The figures indicate that 9.5 million people around the world live with the disease in 2025, but there are 4.1 million others who are considered ‘missing’, which means they died as a result of the disease, although they would survive in the same year if it was not the lack of medical care or timely diagnostic failure. The results of that study were published at the Annual Meeting of the European Society for Diabetes Studies in Vienna, and the researchers believe that these estimates represent a global warning bell that millions of lives are still lost, despite the existence of real available treatments and instruments, which provide healthcare systems, governments and international organizations for an urgent challenge and Availability of insulin and the availability of using life for everyone. According to the study estimates, the number of people with Type 1 diabetes has increased by 13% between 2021 and 2025 to 9.5 million patients, with an extra increase to 14.7 million at 2040. to some degree of some improvement in the care of the care. A shocking focus and the researchers believe that the declared numbers may be less than reality, due to the lack of data or the absence of diagnosis, which increases the hypothesis that “the actual burden of the disease is far greater than reflected in official statistics.” The study estimated that 4.1 million “missing persons” claimed the disease in their lives in 2025, and that they were patients who could live without dying early due to the lack of care or lack of diagnosis, and this number contains about 669 thousand people who were not diagnosed at all. The researchers say that India alone is a ‘shocking focus’ because they indicated that the disease had killed 159,000 people, due to the absence of diagnosis. The report indicates that this pattern is not an exception, but reflects a broader problem in low and medium income countries, as health systems and high cost of treatment are a deadly obstacle to patients. “Our maximum priority should be to reduce the number of people dying early due to a lack of diagnosis or below level care. It is expected that the number of missing persons will rise to 6.7 million by 2040, but millions of lives can be saved by real treatments and techniques.” According to the researchers in the law, the gap in healthcare is embodied especially in marginalized societies. People belonging to these groups face major obstacles that prevent them from reaching insulin, basic medicine or support techniques, and they suffer from poor sugar levels, the decline in the quality of their lives and their expected age. Atlas of the International Diabetes Federation and these new estimates represent regional and national level, a detailed step to give governments and health authorities the necessary data to identify the most involved societies and to ensure high quality and affordable care for all. The analysis is based on the data of the ‘Atlas of the International Diabetes Federation’ to estimate the incidence of the number of people living with the disease, the rate of infection for new cases, deaths and the average life expectancy for children, adolescents and adults in 202 countries between 2021 and 2025, with expectations expanded to 2040. Variations between countries. The study excluded some information from the Corona virus pandemic period to avoid disorders, and the researchers recognized the presence of restrictions due to the lack of data in many countries, especially with regard to wrong diagnosis or the lack of accurate data on adults. The year 2025 is expected to see a remarkable increase in the number of people with type 1 diabetes in the world, as it is likely to diagnose approximately 513 thousand new cases, including 222 thousand cases of children and adolescents under the age of twenty, which reflect the size of the health challenge facing the younger groups. Facts and information on type 1 diabetes chronic self -immune disease attack the immune system the pancreatic cells responsible for insulin production. Insulin hormone helps the body to transport ‘glucose’ sugar from blood to cells to gain energy. The causes of the disease are ‘exactly known’, but it is believed that genetic and environmental factors (such as viruses) play a role in its appearance. The disease is often diagnosed in children and adolescents. Its common symptoms include “extreme thirst”, “regular urination”, “unjustified weight loss”, “constant stress” and “confusion in vision”. Treatment depends on insulin use of life, while the level of blood sugar continues regularly, a healthy diet and physical activity. It differs from the second type, as it is not related to obesity or lifestyle, but rather an immune disease that is not currently prevented. Finland is above the global rates of children’s injuries in the age group to 14 years, with about 64 cases per 100,000 children, in a remarkable phenomenon that requires an in -depth scientific statement. It is also estimated that more than half of patients worldwide, or about 5.4 million people, will be distributed in only ten countries, especially the United States, India, China, Brazil, the United Kingdom, Germany, Russia, Canada, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, which reflect the concentration of the disease in specific geographical regions. At the death level, the same year is expected to record 174 thousand deaths associated with the disease, including 30 thousand deaths caused by the absence of early diagnosis, while India only represents about 6 thousand cases of this category, which raises serious questions about the effectiveness of healthcare systems in early detection and prevention. The researchers say that one of the cruelest facts revealed by the study is related to the average life expectancy of children with type 1 diabetes at the age of ten. Even within countries with high income, remarkable variations have emerged, while Sweden scored a similar level to Norway (66 years), the number in Guyana dropped to 35 years, and in Seychelles, 39 years old, and in Trinidad and Tobago 40 years and these numbers not only reflect the health structure, but also the health structure but also the health structure but also justice to ensure the treatment for all achievement. The absence of effective policy by 2040, the world is expected to be an increase of 55% in the number of type 1 diabetes, but this mutation will not be regional; In Africa, cases will be doubled, an increase of 120% to 829 thousand, while the Middle East and North Africa have recorded an 86% increase to 2.78 million, while growth in Europe will be more moderate by 37% to 3.9 million cases, with an extraordinary jump in Kazakhstan, where the numbers are expected to deflate 111% to 25 thousand cases. These disturbing expectations provide question marks on the readiness of health systems to confront this rising burden, and the severity of governments in the development of effective preventative and diagnostic strategies that limit the effects of the disease and reduce the care gap between countries. The author who participates in the study, “Renza Sibelia” emphasizes that life rescue procedures are not necessarily new or complicated. Early diagnosis, to ensure access to insulin and diabetes supplies, and appropriate healthcare can have enormous benefits, with the possibility of saving millions of lives during the coming decades by making insulin available to all and improving diagnostic rates in all countries. The study confirms that the challenge does not lie in the absence of medical solutions, but rather in the absence of effective policy and fair financing, in addition to continuing the gap in health justice between the north and the south. The researchers believe that there are a set of restrictions in the study that include the lack of accurate data in most countries, in addition to the limited information associated with the wrong diagnosis or the category for adults, and the assumption of the stability of the infection and deaths associated over time, and the data of the pandemic period is excluded to avoid the results. However; Experts believe that these estimates represent the best image currently available, with the expectation of becoming more accurate in improving health monitoring systems and accumulation of new data in the coming years.