People
0

Diabetes in Deadly Unrelenting March

Diabetes in Deadly Unrelenting March
Diabetes in Deadly Unrelenting March

The world is facing an “unrelenting march” of diabetes which now affects nearly one-in-11 adults, the World Health Organization (WHO) says.

In a major report it warned cases had virtually quadrupled from 108 million in 1980 to 422 million in 2014. Officials said the numbers would continue to increase unless “drastic action” was taken, BBC reports.

High blood sugar levels are a major killer - linked to 3.7 million deaths around the world each year. The report lumps both type 1 and type 2 diabetes together, but the surge in cases is predominantly down to type 2 - the form closely linked to poor lifestyle. As the world’s waistlines have ballooned - with one-in-three people now overweight, so too has the number of diabetes cases.

Dr. Etienne Krug, the WHO official in charge of leading efforts against diabetes, told the BBC: “Diabetes is a silent disease, but it is on an unrelenting march that we need to stop.

“We can stop it, we know what needs to be done, but we cannot let it evolve like it does because it has a huge impact on people’s health, on families and on society.”

Failing to control levels of sugar in the blood has devastating health consequences. It triples the risk of a heart attack and leaves people 20 times more likely to have a leg amputated, as well as increasing the risk of stroke, kidney failure, blindness and complications in pregnancy.

Diabetes itself is the eighth biggest killer in the world, accounting for 1.5 million deaths each year. But a further 2.2 million deaths are linked to high blood sugar levels. In the 1980s the highest rates were found in affluent countries. But, in a remarkable transformation, it is now low and middle income countries bear the largest burden.

 Need for Drastic Action

Dr. Krug told the BBC News, “That’s where we see the steepest increase. Knowing that’s where most of the population lives in the world, it does show numbers will continue to increase unless drastic action is taken.”

The Middle East has seen the prevalence of diabetes soar from 5.9% of adults in 1980 to 13.7% in 2014.

“We are the region that has experienced the greatest rise in diabetes, moving from 6 million to 43 million,” said Dr. Slim Slama, a WHO specialist in region. “Growing and ageing populations are behind part of the rise, but diet and inactivity were a major problem.”

More than three quarters of teenagers in the region are doing less than the recommended level of exercise, he said. The WHO report said the solution required the whole of society to act.

“The ‘easy’ solution is for all of us to exercise, eat healthily and not gain excess weight,” said Dr. Krug.

He called on governments to regulate the fat and sugar content of foods to ensure there were healthy options available to people. Better urban planning that encouraged people to cycle and walk was also essential, he added. He also called on the food industry to act responsibly to ensure it reduced the fat and sugar content of foods, and to cease marketing unhealthy foods to young people.

It is only by keeping blood sugar levels in check that the deadly complications of the disease can be contained. But the report showed that two thirds of low income countries were not able to provide blood sugar monitors or drugs such as insulin or metformin for most people.

Financialtribune.com