Indians or Indian Americans — who has higher diabetes rates?

We compared rates of diabetes and prediabetes between U.S. South Asians in MASALA with Indians living in Chennai, India.  We found that diabetes rates are:

  • higher in India (38% in India vs. 24% in MASALA),
  • but that prediabetes rates are higher in the U.S. (33% in MASALA vs. 24% in India).
  • There is a growing burden of diabetes in India.
  • It appears that South Asians in the U.S. have started making some healthy lifestyle changes to reduce their risk of developing diabetes.

We know that walking 30 minutes/day and losing 5-7% of your body weight can help prevent or delay development of diabetes.

MASALA in The Wall Street Journal

MASALA in The Wall Street Journal

Dr. Alka Kanaya is principal investigator for the Masala study, which is looking at why South Asians have relatively high rates of heart disease. ‘If we can figure out what these factors are that really impact heart disease [in South Asians] then we can start targeting interventions specific to lowering those risk factors,’ she says. 

Read about us in the New York Times!

Read about us in the New York Times!

South Asians today account for more than half of the world's cardiac patients. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, and rates have risen over the past several decades.