Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine the incidence and prevalence of Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes in Estonia in different sex and age groups. The data collection was based on a centralized retrospective registration of all cases of Type 1 diabetes nationwide using the records of all hospitals and polyclinics where diabetic patients are treated. In 1988, 35 new cases of Type 1 diabetes were diagnosed among children aged 0–14 years (10.3 per 100,000) and 131 among the population over 15 years. The highest incidence of Type 1 diabetes (39.9 per 100,000) was found in the age group 15–19 years. The total number of patients with Type 1 diabetes in Estonia was 2,719 in 1988. The overall prevalence was 1.72 per 1,000. It was highest in the age group 40–49 years (3.04 in males and 2.77 in females). In children under 15 years 204 cases of Type 1 diabetes were identified at the end of 1988. These data suggest that the risk of Type 1 diabetes in Estonia is not low, but is certainly not as high as in Finland where the population is ethnically and linguistically similar and where the highest incidence of Type 1 diabetes is found.