The number of adults living with diabetes worldwide has surpassed 800 million, more than quadrupling since 1990, according to the latest data.
The analysis, conducted by the Non-Communicable Disease Risk Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC) with support from the World Health Organization (WHO), highlights the scale of the diabetes epidemic and an urgent need for stronger global action to address both rising disease rates and widening treatment gaps, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs).
“We have seen an alarming rise in diabetes over the past three decades, which reflects the increase in obesity, compounded by the impacts of the marketing of unhealthy food, a lack of physical activity and economic hardship,” said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
“To bring the global diabetes epidemic under control, countries must urgently take action. This starts with enacting policies that support healthy diets and physical activity, and, most importantly, health systems that provide prevention, early detection and treatment.”
The study reports that global diabetes prevalence in adults rose from 7 percent to 14 percent between 1990 and 2022.
Low and Middle Income Countries experienced the largest increases, where diabetes rates have soared while treatment access remains persistently low.
This trend has led to stark global inequalities: in 2022, almost 450 million adults aged 30 and older – about 59 percent of all adults with diabetes – remained untreated, marking a 3.5-fold increase in untreated people since 1990. Ninety per cent of these untreated adults are living in Low- and Middle-Income Countries.
The study further reveals substantial global differences in diabetes rates, with the prevalence of diabetes among adults aged 18 and older around 20 percent in the World Health Organization’s South-East Asia and the Eastern Mediterranean Regions.
These two regions, together with the African Region, have the lowest rates of diabetes treatment coverage, with fewer than 4 in 10 adults with diabetes taking glucose-lowering medication for their diabetes.
WHO’s commitment to global diabetes response
Addressing the soaring diabetes burden, WHO is also launching a new global monitoring framework on diabetes.
This product represents a crucial step in the global response, providing comprehensive guidance to countries in measuring and evaluating diabetes prevention, care, outcomes and impacts.
By tracking key indicators such as glycemic control, hypertension and access to essential medicines, countries can improve targeted interventions and policy initiatives.
This standardized approach empowers countries to prioritize resources effectively, driving significant improvements in diabetes prevention and care.
WHO’s Global Diabetes Compact, launched in 2021, includes the vision of reducing the risk of diabetes, and ensuring that all people who are diagnosed with diabetes have access to equitable, comprehensive, affordable and quality treatment and care.
The work undertaken as part of the Compact will also support the prevention of type 2 diabetes from obesity, unhealthy diet and physical inactivity.
In addition, the same year, a diabetes resolution was endorsed at the World Health Assembly urging Member States to raise the priority given to the prevention, diagnosis and control of diabetes as well as prevention and management of risk factors such as obesity.
In 2022, WHO established five global diabetes coverage targets to be achieved by 2030. One of these targets is to ensure that 80 percent of people with diagnosed diabetes achieve good glycemic control. Today’s release underlines the scale and urgency of action needed to advance efforts to close the gap.
The upcoming year 2025 presents a significant opportunity to catalyse action against the alarming rise in diabetes worldwide with the Fourth High-level Meeting of the United Nations General Assembly on the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) to take place in September.
This meeting brings heads of states and governments together to set a powerful vision for preventing and controlling Non-Communicable Diseases, including diabetes, through a collective commitment to address root causes and improve access to detection and treatment.
By aligning efforts towards the 2030 and 2050 goals, this high-level meeting is a pivotal moment for strengthening global health systems, including primary health care and halting the rise in the diabetes epidemic.
The study was conducted by the NCD Risk Factor Collaboration, a worldwide network of over 1500 researchers and practitioners, in collaboration with WHO.
It is the first global analysis of trends in both diabetes rates and treatment coverage that is based on data from over 140 million people aged 18 years or older that were included in more than 1000 studies covering populations in all countries.
The study used an updated methodology of measuring diabetes prevalence in populations from previous studies to provide a more accurate overview of the global diabetes epidemic.