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Epidemic of Diabetes
Worsening with Obesity
One in three Americans born in the year
2000 will develop adult-onset diabetes, a worsening epidemic that
disproportionately affects women and minorities, federal researchers
said.
Rising rates of diabetes are directly
related to the increasing incidence of obesity among Americans,
said researcher K.M. Venkat Narayan of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, Atlanta.
"The overwhelming reason why diabetes
is increasing in the country is because there's an epidemic of
obesity," Narayan said.
"Among Americans, a woman has a
slightly higher risk, probably a 39 percent chance of developing
diabetes in her lifetime, and minority groups, particularly Hispanics,
have a one in two chance of developing diabetes," he said.
The disease's impact on blood vessels
damages the body's organs, can cause blindness, and often leads
to kidney and heart disease -- and shaves between 10 and 15 years
off a victim's life.
Projecting trends based on health
data covering 360,000 Americans from 1984 to 2000, the research
estimated the number of people with diabetes will increase to
more than 28 million in 50 years from 17 million currently.
The data showed nearly 7 percent
of U.S. adults had diabetes in 1999, up from less than 5 percent
a decade earlier.
The risk of diabetes is higher
than a woman's risk of breast cancer -- a one in eight chance
-- and roughly the same as the risk of heart disease -- one in
two for men, one in three for women.
Narayan, writing in this week's
edition of the Journal of the American Medical Association, said
people can lessen their risk appreciably through regular exercise
and a healthy diet.
Reference
Source 89
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