The analysis I am currently performing is not a statistical analysis but an analysis of the morbidity factors at a high level. Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease that usually occurs in childhood or adolescence. Therefore, it is not a disease related to nutrition and lifestyle. (Maps of the worldwide prevalence can be found online.)
Several highlights:
1 There is a high variation between the countries worldwide, especially in less developed countries. (Variances of hundreds of percent)
2 China is a particular case, with a meager rate of type 1 diabetes and higher rates of type 2 diabetes worthy of special attention.
3 Especially notable is Saudi Arabia, with record rates of type 1 diabetes, along with Sweden and Norway.
Interim conclusions:
1 Assuming that the Saudi Arabian population is not genetically different from its neighbors, the argument that type 1 diabetes has a dominant genetic component falls flat.
2. You will also find variation in cancer incidence, but in gaps of tens of percent and not in hundreds of percent.
3 The structure of the family unit, social climate, and community support hugely influence the prevalence of type 1 diabetes.
The inevitable conclusion:
1 Type 1 diabetes is a disease that originates from unresolved mental traumas at a young age! Therefore, the treatment must also begin in the mental-energetic dimension at the earliest possible stages, as long as the pancreas produces insulin.
2, likely, these conclusions are also valid for other autoimmune diseases.
Back to forum All autoimmune diseases.
Back to forum All autoimmune diseases.
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