“…1,28,29 Although there are suggestions that incidence has stabilized in some countries, 29 higher annual rates of increase have been seen from some middle-income countriessuch as 13.4% Chile, 30 12.0% in China 31 , and 12.0%-13.0% in the Maldives. 32 However, the 18.0% annualized increase in this article is highly unlikely to be mostly due to changing environmental factorswe hypothesize that case recognition has increased as well. This is supported by the peak in total number of diagnoses and observed incidence (0.80 per 100,000 <25 years) being seen in the year after a poster public health campaign showing pictograms of the six classic symptoms/ signs of T1D in youth (polyuria, polydipsia, bed-wetting, weight loss, tiredness and becoming very ill).…”