http://news360.com/article/311101431#
About half of all Americans have either diabetes or pre-diabetes,
according to a new report. And experts in the field say that's good news.
That's
because the study finds that after two decades of linear growth, the
prevalence of diabetes in the United States has finally started to
plateau.
In a paper published Tuesday in JAMA, the authors write
that their findings are consistent with other studies that show
the percentage of people with diagnosed diabetes remained steady from
2008 to 2012.
"Although
obesity and Type 2 diabetes remain major clinical and public health
problems in the United States, the current data provide a glimmer of
hope," wrote William Herman and Amy Rothberg of the University of
Michigan in an article accompanying the paper.
Herman and
Rothberg, who were not involved in the research, said the study suggests
the implementation of food, nutrition and physical activity policies
and regulations by federal, state and local governments as well as other
efforts to curb obesity and diabetes have finally started to pay off.
"Progress has been made, but expanded and sustained efforts will be required," they wrote.
The
study is based on data collected by the National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey. The researchers report that from 2011 to 2012
between 12% and 14% of Americans had diabetes, depending on what
criteria were used to diagnose them. This percentage has remained
stable since 2008.
The research team also found that the
proportion of people who had diabetes without knowing it decreased from
40.3% in 1988-1994 to 31% in 2011-2012.
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A previous version of this post incorrectly stated the beginning year in the period 1988-1994 as 1998.
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This decrease, however, was not seen across all racial and ethnic groups.
The
proportion of Mexican Americans who were undiagnosed was higher than
their white and black counterparts, and this percentage had not
decreased over time. The authors suggest this result may be due to a
lower percentage of Mexican Americans with health insurance, leading to
lower access to healthcare.
The authors also found that Asian people were more likely than any other racial group to have undiagnosed diabetes.
The
prevalence of people with pre-diabetes has grown over time. Previous
studies show that between 1990 and 2002, 29% of people had pre-diabetes.
Between 2007 and 2010, that number grew to 36%. In 2011 and 2012, the
authors report the number grew slightly to 37% to 38%.
Altogether,
that means that in 2011-2012, 49% to 52% of the entire U.S. population
is estimated to have diabetes or pre-diabetes.
I was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in Nov., 1999. Surgery and radioactive iodine followed. In Dec., 2006, I found a lump in my neck that turned cancerous. Shortly thereafter, it was found to have metastasized throughout my body and to be untreatable and inoperable. I started a clinical trial with Sutent (sunitinib) since Apr., 2007. In Nov., 2013, the tumors began growing again and I was removed from the Sutent Clinical Trial. I started a clinical trial taking of CEDIRANIB on 04/09/14.
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
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