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Diabetes
on the Increase
but Death Rate Falling
Diabetes
is rising in the rich world but the death rate from it is falling
due to early detection and better treatment, scientists said in
a recent study published.
Researchers from the University
of Southern Denmark carried out an analysis of diabetes in a community
of 470,000 people between 1993 and 1999.
While the proportion of people
with diabetes increased by around three percent annually during
the six-year study, the associated death rate fell three percent
each year.
Commenting on the findings published
in this week's edition of the medical journal The Lancet, Edwin
Gale, diabetes expert at Britain's University of Bristol, warned
against complacency.
"Make no mistake, obesity and diabetes
are indeed on the increase, a problem big and deadly enough to
need no supporting rhetoric," he wrote in the journal.
Diabetes effects some 135 million
people worldwide and the number of sufferers has been increasing
steadily in the West due in part to a rise in obesity. A healthy
diet and regular exercise reduce the risk of getting it.
Patients with type II, or adult
onset, diabetes produce too little insulin and too much glucose.
It can lead to blindness, kidney failure, heart disease, disability
and death.
Reference
Source 89
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