India’s latest National Family Health Survey (NFHS-6) has highlighted a worrying trend that could shape the country’s future health landscape: the growing risk of diabetes beginning in childhood. While the survey records encouraging improvements in maternal and child health, nutrition, and healthcare access, it also reveals a steady rise in obesity, overweight prevalence, and high blood sugar levels across several states. These findings suggest that India may face a significant increase in diabetes and other metabolic disorders in the coming decades.
Health experts caution that Type 2 diabetes does not develop suddenly in adulthood. The disease often begins years earlier through a process known as insulin resistance, where the body becomes less effective at using insulin to regulate blood sugar. This condition can emerge during childhood, long before any visible symptoms appear. As children increasingly adopt sedentary lifestyles and unhealthy eating habits, their long-term risk of diabetes rises considerably.
Several factors are contributing to this growing concern. Rising childhood obesity rates, reduced physical activity, excessive screen time, frequent consumption of sugary drinks, increasing dependence on ultra-processed foods, inadequate sleep, and a family history of diabetes all play a role in increasing metabolic risks. Experts warn that these factors often accumulate over time, creating a pathway toward diabetes and other chronic diseases later in life.
A particularly important concern is abdominal obesity, which refers to excess fat accumulation around the waist. Doctors say this type of fat is more harmful than general body fat because it is closely linked to insulin resistance, inflammation, and future diabetes risk. As a result, measurements such as waist circumference and waist-to-height ratio are increasingly being used alongside Body Mass Index (BMI) to assess a child’s metabolic health.
NFHS-6 also highlights India’s continuing “double burden” of malnutrition. While undernutrition remains a challenge in many regions, obesity and lifestyle-related disorders are increasing simultaneously. Research suggests that children who experience poor nutrition during early developmental stages may become more vulnerable to obesity and diabetes later in life, especially when exposed to calorie-dense diets and inactive lifestyles.
The survey reflects broader lifestyle changes affecting children today. Increased reliance on smartphones, tablets, computers, and gaming devices has reduced opportunities for outdoor activities and physical exercise. Combined with academic pressures and unhealthy dietary patterns, these changes contribute to weight gain, poor cardiovascular fitness, sleep disturbances, and increased diabetes risk.
The consequences extend beyond diabetes. Childhood obesity is associated with conditions such as fatty liver disease, high blood pressure, abnormal cholesterol levels, hormonal imbalances, and mental health challenges. Many of these complications can develop years before diabetes is diagnosed.
Experts recommend early screening for children who are overweight, have abdominal obesity, a family history of diabetes, high blood pressure, or abnormal cholesterol levels. They stress that diabetes prevention must begin in childhood through healthier diets, regular physical activity, adequate sleep, and reduced screen time. NFHS-6 serves as a warning that safeguarding children’s health today is essential to preventing a larger diabetes crisis in the future.





































