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    Home»Lifestyle»Health

    Why India’s Young Are Falling Sick

    Anish DesaiBy Anish Desai
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    A 27-year-old software engineer in Mumbai begins his day late, the residue of another night of poor sleep. Breakfast is skipped. Work unfolds on a screen. Meals arrive via apps. Physical activity is negligible. He considers himself “too young” to worry about health—until a routine check-up flags high blood pressure and borderline diabetes.

    This is no longer an outlier. It is fast becoming the urban Indian norm.

    India’s disease burden has undergone a decisive shift towards non-communicable diseases (NCDs), which now account for roughly 63–65 per cent of all deaths. Nearly one in four deaths is premature—occurring before the age of 70, with a worrying concentration in the 30–50 age bracket.

    Cardiovascular diseases alone contribute about 28% of total deaths. Alarmingly, up to 50 per cent of heart attacks occur before the age of 50, and nearly a quarter before 40, marking a sharp departure from earlier epidemiological patterns.

    Diabetes has reached epidemic proportions, affecting an estimated 101 million Indians, with another 136 million classified as prediabetic. Early-onset cases are rising steadily, particularly in urban centres, where prevalence among young adults is estimated at 8–12 per cent.

    Hypertension, often undiagnosed, affects nearly 220 million people. Among young adults, prevalence ranges between 10–20 per cent, compounded by low awareness and poor control rates.

    Obesity, once considered a marker of affluence, has become widespread. Between 20–30 per cent of urban young adults are overweight or obese, while central obesity affects as many as 35–40 per cent. More than half of Indians fail to meet recommended physical activity levels.

    The crisis extends beyond physical health. Mental health disorders are increasingly common, with depression affecting an estimated 7–10 per cent of young adults and anxiety disorders impacting 10–15 per cent. Suicide remains one of the leading causes of death in India, claiming over 170,000 lives annually.

    Substance use adds another layer of risk. Tobacco consumption remains high at around 28%, while alcohol use continues to rise. Infectious diseases persist alongside this NCD surge—India still accounts for nearly 27 per cent of the global tuberculosis burden, disproportionately affecting the young.

    Environmental factors further compound the crisis. Air pollution alone is responsible for an estimated 1.6–1.7 million deaths annually.

    Meanwhile, road traffic accidents claim over 150,000 lives each year, with the majority of victims aged between 18 and 45—striking at the most economically productive segment of the population.

    The financial implications are staggering. The combined economic burden of NCDs and mental health conditions is projected to exceed $4–5 trillion by 2030.

    At the core of this crisis lie familiar yet deeply entrenched drivers: sedentary lifestyles, ultra-processed diets, chronic stress, poor sleep, and minimal engagement with preventive healthcare. Fewer than 30% of young adults undergo routine health screenings.

    The solutions are equally clear—though far from fully implemented. They include sustained lifestyle modification, early and regular screening, strengthened primary healthcare systems, workplace wellness programmes, and policy interventions ranging from food regulation to tobacco control. Improvements in air quality and a significant expansion of mental health services are equally critical.

    What India faces is not merely a health challenge, but a generational risk.

    A decisive pivot towards preventive healthcare is no longer optional—it is imperative to reduce premature mortality, contain long-term morbidity, and safeguard the country’s economic future.

    (Dr Anish Desai is a healthcare entrepreneur. He is leading IntelliMed Healthcare Solutions)

    Anish Desai
    Anish Desai

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