Diabetes, one of the world’s driving reasons for death and incapacity, besets more than 400 million individuals. Numerous new advancements are being produced to address this worldwide plague, however those with the best effect will probably be minimal effort portable arrangements that can be connected in developing markets. More than seventy five percent of the world’s diabetics live in low-and center pay nations. China and India have the biggest number of cases; the ailment additionally seethes in Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, and Bangladesh. As occurrence keeps on expanding in the majority of the developing scene, patients and human services frameworks face mounting weights
People diagnosed with diabetes are on the rise and diabetes are among the top 10 causes of death in ...
The explosive increase in the prevalence of diabetes mellitus in resource-strapped regions of the wo...
The past 10 years have seen a revolution in technology improving the lives of people with diabetes. ...
India, the world’s second most populous country, now has more people with type 2 diabetes (more than...
The digitization of healthcare and its usage in the delivery of healthcare have experienced exponent...
The number of patients with type 2 diabetes is increasing rapidly in both developed and developing c...
The global epidemic of diabetes, with increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2D), is placing a h...
There are an estimated 246 million people with diabetes in the world, of whom about 80% reside in de...
The Egyptians are credited with originally describing diabetes, which is defined by polyuria and wei...
Increasing prevalence of chronic diseases is a major contributor for rapid rise in healthcare cost i...
Factors such as poverty, ethnicity, socio-economic status, poor infrastructure and governance, etc.,...
Diabetes mellitus is a worldwide health problem affecting more than 415 million individuals; this es...
The prevalence of diabetes has increased worldwide, leading to a massive social, economic, and healt...
Utkarsh Ojha,1 Raihan Mohammed2 1Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine, Imperial ...
Diabetes mellitus is a major source of mortality and morbidity along with an economic menace all ove...
People diagnosed with diabetes are on the rise and diabetes are among the top 10 causes of death in ...
The explosive increase in the prevalence of diabetes mellitus in resource-strapped regions of the wo...
The past 10 years have seen a revolution in technology improving the lives of people with diabetes. ...
India, the world’s second most populous country, now has more people with type 2 diabetes (more than...
The digitization of healthcare and its usage in the delivery of healthcare have experienced exponent...
The number of patients with type 2 diabetes is increasing rapidly in both developed and developing c...
The global epidemic of diabetes, with increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes (T2D), is placing a h...
There are an estimated 246 million people with diabetes in the world, of whom about 80% reside in de...
The Egyptians are credited with originally describing diabetes, which is defined by polyuria and wei...
Increasing prevalence of chronic diseases is a major contributor for rapid rise in healthcare cost i...
Factors such as poverty, ethnicity, socio-economic status, poor infrastructure and governance, etc.,...
Diabetes mellitus is a worldwide health problem affecting more than 415 million individuals; this es...
The prevalence of diabetes has increased worldwide, leading to a massive social, economic, and healt...
Utkarsh Ojha,1 Raihan Mohammed2 1Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine, Imperial ...
Diabetes mellitus is a major source of mortality and morbidity along with an economic menace all ove...
People diagnosed with diabetes are on the rise and diabetes are among the top 10 causes of death in ...
The explosive increase in the prevalence of diabetes mellitus in resource-strapped regions of the wo...
The past 10 years have seen a revolution in technology improving the lives of people with diabetes. ...