Abstract

Type 1 diabetes, one of the common chronic conditions in children and adolescents, is a serious lifelong condition requiring daily treatment with exogenous insulin for survival. Descriptive epidemiology is important for planning of adequate diabetes health-care provision and could provide clues to aetiology. Over the past few decades, standardised diabetes incidence registries have provided a wealth of data from selected countries.1,2 A recurring theme has been large geographical variation, increasing incidence rates, and lack of data from many low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs).

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