Standards of medical care for type 2 diabetes in China 2019

Weiping Jia(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Jianping Weng(University of Science and Technology of China), Dalong Zhu(Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital), Linong Ji(Peking University), Juming Lu(Chinese People's Liberation Army), Zhiguang Zhou(Central South University), Dajin Zou(Second Military Medical University), Lixin Guo(Beijing United Family Hospital), Qiuhe Ji(Xijing Hospital), Li Chen(Tianjin Infectious Diseases Hospital), Liming Chen(Tianjin Infectious Diseases Hospital), Jingtao Dou(Chinese People's Liberation Army), Xiaohui Guo(Peking University), Hongyu Kuang(Harbin Medical University), Ling Li(China Medical University), Qifu Li(The Affiliated Yongchuan Hospital of Chongqing Medical University), Xiaoying Li(Sun Yat-sen University), Jing Liu(Gansu Provincial Hospital), Xingwu Ran(Sichuan University), Lixin Shi(Guiyang Medical University), Guangyao Song(Hebei General Hospital), Xinhua Xiao(Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College), Liyong Yang(Fujian Medical University), Zhigang Zhao(Zhengzhou City Hospital), On behalf of Chinese Diabetes Society
Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews
March 25, 2019
Cited by 757Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The prevalence of diabetes in China has increased rapidly from 0.67% in 1980 to 10.4% in 2013, with the aging of the population and westernization of lifestyle. Since its foundation in 1991, the Chinese Diabetes Society (CDS) has been dedicated to improving academic exchange and the academic level of diabetes research in China. From 2003 to 2014, four versions of Chinese diabetes care guidelines have been published. The guidelines have played an important role in standardizing clinical practice and improving the status quo of diabetes prevention and control in China. Since September 2016, the CDS has invited experts in cardiovascular diseases, psychiatric diseases, nutrition, and traditional Chinese medicine to work with endocrinologists from the CDS to review the new clinical research evidence related to diabetes over the previous 4 years. Over a year of careful revision, this has resulted in the present, new version of guidelines for prevention and care of type 2 diabetes in China. The main contents include epidemiology of type 2 diabetes in China; diagnosis and classification of diabetes; primary, secondary, and tertiary diabetes prevention; diabetes education and management support; blood glucose monitoring; integrated control targets for type 2 diabetes and treatments for hyperglycaemia; medical nutrition therapy; exercise therapy for type 2 diabetes; smoking cessation; pharmacologic therapy for hyperglycaemia; metabolic surgery for type 2 diabetes; prevention and treatment of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases in patients with type 2 diabetes; hypoglycaemia; chronic diabetic complications; special types of diabetes; metabolic syndrome; and diabetes and traditional Chinese medicine.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis