Discussion: What can be learned from the worldwide prevalence map of type 1 diabetes

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What can be learned from the worldwide prevalence map of type 1 diabetes

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.

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