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Re: Diabetes news for Summer 2019

That is so interesting @cherry  As they know more, they are separating it according to subtlety.  I suspect that will be very helpful especially when it comes to medications.  Target it sooner and less side effects from a medication that may not be right for you and your particular disease.  Gives us all hope doesn't it?     

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Re: Diabetes news for Summer 2019

Yes it does @Laura14 

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Re: Diabetes news for Summer 2019

I only like real milk ,so, I buy Fairlife

 

 

Milk is a must-have for topping off your morning cereal, making clouds in your coffee, or washing down a spoonful of peanut butter. But if you have diabetes, don’t forget that this traditional beverage also contains carbs, which can affect your blood sugar levels.

One cup of fat-free cow’s milk has around 12 grams of carbs. There is no added sugar, just the naturally occurring lactose straight from the source.

Don’t have a cow, though — there are plenty of non-dairy milks out there with zero-to-low carbs, like unsweetened flax or almond milk.

You can continue drinking cow’s milk too, but you’ll want to test your blood glucose levels before, and two hours after, to see how much it affects you.

Remember, a glass of milk is going to affect everyone a bit differently, so there’s no set amount or ideal type of milk for everyone.

Your best bet is to work with your doctor or a registered dietitian/nutritionist to determine a daily nutrition plan that’s right for you.

 
So many options! How do I choose?

If you live with type 2 diabetes, your dietary needs are specific and take a bit of daily planning. You don’t need a degree in advanced mathematics to figure it out, though.

Follow these general guidelines when it comes to choosing a milk:

  • Calcium – Adults ages 19-51 need 1,000 mg of calcium each day. One glass of low-fat cow’s milk has around 300 mg. This is one area where some alternative milks can fall behind their dairy rival. Some have only a small fraction of the calcium found in milk, while others add calcium and vitamin-D — check those nutrition facts labels.
  • Insulin, blood sugar, and carbs – Carbs have the greatest impact by far on blood sugar. If you have type 1 or type 2 diabetes, your optimal daily amount of carbs can vary. Research shows limiting carb consumption to between 25–45 percent of calories per day is effective for improving blood sugar control. For 1500 calories, this is 75–150 grams daily; for 2000 calories, this is 100–225 grams daily. There is no ideal percentage of carbs and your healthcare team can help you determine the best eating pattern.
 
More choices, moo-re milk

The days are over when your biggest milk aisle decision was between skim and two percent. Now there are more alternative milks than ever before. Here’s a look at a few options.

Milk Type Calories Fat Sat. Fat Carbs Protein Calcium(% of daily value)


Almond Breeze Unsweetened Vanilla Almond Milk (8oz)
30 cal.2g0g1g1g45%


So Delicious Unsweetened Organic Coconut Milk (8oz)
45 cal.4.5g4g1g0g10%


Silk Organic Unsweetened Soy Milk (8oz)
80 cal.4g0.5g4g7g15%


Good Karma Unsweetened Flax Milk with Omega 3 + Protein (8oz)
60 cal.3g0g1g8g30%
Here are some suggestions for enjoying alternative milks:

Unsweetened vanilla almond milk – You’ll love the nutty, creamy taste of almond milk in your breakfast cereal or smoothies.

Unsweetened coconut milk – Creamy coconut milk gives you a taste of the tropics and is perfect for pouring in your coffee. Just note that coconut milk has a higher fat content than other types of milk.

Unsweetened soy milk – Try adding it to oatmeal or blending it in a protein smoothie as a meal replacement.

Unsweetened flaxseed milk – Flaxseed is jam-packed with healthy omega-3 fatty acids. What’s not to love?

Banana really enhances the nutty flavor of flax. Blend them together with ice in a smoothie but remember to add 15-30g of carbs for a half or whole banana.

 
 
 
Udder nonsense: milks to avoid

Don’t care for plain milk? The following don’t necessarily have to be avoided entirely if your individual goals for carbs and calories allow for a few more grams. But these ones are considerably more carb-loaded.

Chocolate, and other flavored milks

Chocolate milk typically has 8-10 grams of added sugar per serving. TruMoo’s Chocolate 1 percent low-fat milk has 2.5 grams of total fat, 20 grams of total carbs, and 8 grams of added sugar, for example.

Flavored milk can be a nutritious substitute when you are craving something sweet and can be used in the context of the total carb allowance for the day.

Whole milk

Whole milk is higher in calories and fat. Choosing a low-fat option will give you the same amount of calcium without the fat. For those who need to gain a few pounds, this is a good choice.

 
 
Meal planning with milk

Milk is calcium-rich and can fit into your daily meal plan in a healthy way. You just need to stay conscious of nutrition labels and test your blood sugar before and after consuming new foods.

Diabetes meal planning tips

Some popular methods to discuss with your doctor or registered dietitian/nutritionist include:

  • Carb counting: Under this plan, you’ll keep close track of how many carbs you consume with each meal or snack, and the total for the day. Work with your healthcare team to determine how many carbs you need daily. One glass of fat-free or low-fat cow’s milk has around 12 grams of carbs, whereas unsweetened soy milk has just 4 grams per serving. Remember to check the nutrition label for calcium, vitamin-D, vitamin-A, potassium and other vitamins and minerals before making a choice.
  • Plate method: The plate method involves filling each plate you eat with 25 percent protein, 25 percent grains or starchy foods, and 50 percent non-starchy vegetables. This can be effective for keeping your blood glucose levels in check. Factor in beverages like milk too, which can count as both a protein and carb source.
  • Glycemic index/glycemic load: Foods with a high glycemic index or high glycemic load raise blood glucose levels quickly. A glass of low-fat cow’s milk has a glycemic index of 37 and a glycemic load of 4. Food and drinks under 55 are considered low on the glycemic index scale.
 
 
Milk as a preventative for type 2 diabetes

There’s a reason your parents tried to get you to drink more milk when you were a kid. It has some seriously health benefits — it’s a rich source of calcium, vitamin-D, potassium, and may even help preventtype 2 diabetes.

Research suggests a strong connection between consuming low-fat dairy and a reduced risk of type 2 diabetes.

A large-scale study even found that middle-aged individuals who consumed milk daily reduced their risk of developing type 2 diabetes by a whopping 12 percent, compared to non-drinkers. Risk of diabetes decreased as the number of servings per day increased.

Current research on milk alternatives and their effect on type 2 diabetes risk is not available.

 
 
Takeaway

If you’re living with diabetes, don’t give up milk if you like it. Milk provides 9 essential nutrients and can be part of a healthy diabetes eating plan.

There are lower-carb and unsweetened alternative milk options out there, including soy, almond and flax milk if you prefer.

 
 
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Re: Diabetes news for Summer 2019

A new study from Ohio State University has found that a low carb diet can help those at a higher risk of developing diabetes — even if they do not actually lose any weight.

A low carb diet may reverse metabolic syndrome and stave off type 2 diabetes in people at risk.
The research specifically looked at people with metabolic syndrome.

Metabolic syndrome is a cluster of risk factors that can increase a person's risk of developing certain health issues, including diabetesheart disease, and stroke.

These risk factors include a large waistline, a high triglyceride level, low levels of high density lipoprotein ("good") cholesterolhigh blood pressure, and high fasting blood sugar.

For a diagnosis of metabolic syndrome, a person must meet three of these criteria.

For their study — the results of which now appear in the Journal of Clinical Investigation Insight — the researchers gathered 10 men and 6 women who had a diagnosis of metabolic syndrome.

Over a period of 4 months, each participant ate three different randomly assigned diets that lasted around a month each. The diets were low carb, moderate carb, and high carb.

The researchers also ensured that the participants would not lose any weight during the study, as they prepared and customized each meal to suit each person's specific caloric needs.


The diets in detail

Each diet contained 20% protein, but the carb and fat content varied for each type:

 The low carb diet had 6% carbs and 74% fat.
 The moderate carb diet had 32% carbs and 48% fat.
 The high carb diet had 57% carbs and 23% fat.

The scientists checked in with the participants after a month on each diet to see how it affected their cholesterol levels. They noted that after consuming the low carb diet for a month, the participants had lower triglycerides and improved cholesterol levels.

There was another finding that was even more surprising: Even though the low carb diet had far more saturated fat than the high carb diet, the participants had lower amounts of saturated fats in their blood after following the low carb diet for a month.

The team also notes that the participants' cholesterol particles were larger, which helps lower the possibility of cardiovascular disease.


Low-carb foods for vegetarians and vegans
We look at the ways in which vegetarians and vegans can adopt a low carb diet.
Read now
Other findings in the low carb group included improvements in blood sugar, as well as an indication that they burned fat more efficiently. Half of the participants no longer qualified for a diagnosis of metabolic syndrome after 4 weeks of eating the low carb diet, but the good news did not end there.

Three people no longer met those criteria after 4 weeks of eating the moderate carb diet, and one person no longer met the criteria after 4 weeks of eating the high carb diet.

Jeff Volek, a professor of human sciences at Ohio State University in Columbus, explains that this was probably because even the high carb diet contained fewer carbs than the participants normally consumed.

"There's no doubt that people with metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes do better on low carb diets, but they typically lose weight, and one of the prevailing thoughts is that the weight loss is driving the improvements," says Prof. Volek. "That was clearly not the case here."

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Metabolic syndrome

As above, to receive a diagnosis of metabolic syndrome, someone must have three of the five risk factors. A person's risk of heart disease, diabetes, and stroke increases for each risk factor they have.

Metabolic syndrome has a few distinct causes, including growing older and a genetic tendency to develop insulin resistance — neither of which a person can control. However, there are other causes that they can control, such as weight gain and long periods of inactivity.

A low carb diet, as this study suggests, could be an important part of treating metabolic syndrome.

Although these results are promising, the study was very short term. The scientists should now conduct further studies into long term low carb diets and how people respond to them.

"Even a modest restriction in carbs is enough to reverse metabolic syndrome in some people, but others need to restrict even more."

Prof. Jeff Volek

 

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Photo by Tim Wimborne / Reuters

In recent years, Alzheimer’s disease has occasionally been referred to as “type 3” diabetes, though that moniker doesn’t make much sense. After all, though they share a problem with insulin, type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease, and type 2 diabetes is a chronic disease caused by diet. Instead of another type of diabetes, it’s increasingly looking like Alzheimer’s is another potential side effect of a sugary, Western-style diet.

In some cases, the path from sugar to Alzheimer’s leads through type 2 diabetes, but as a new study and others show, that’s not always the case.

A longitudinal study, published in the journal Diabetologia, followed 5,189 people over 10 years and found that people with high blood sugar had a faster rate of cognitive decline than those with normal blood sugar—whether or not their blood-sugar level technically made them diabetic. In other words, the higher the blood sugar, the faster the cognitive decline.

“Dementia is one of the most prevalent psychiatric conditions strongly associated with poor quality of later life,” said the lead author, Wuxiang Xie at Imperial College London, via email. “Currently, dementia is not curable, which makes it very important to study risk factors.”

Melissa Schilling, a professor at New York University, performed her own review of studies connecting diabetes to Alzheimer’s in 2016. She sought to reconcile two confusing trends. People who have type 2 diabetes are about twice as likely to get Alzheimer’s, and people who have diabetes and are treated with insulin are also more likely to get Alzheimer’s, suggesting elevated insulin plays a role in Alzheimer’s. In fact, many studies have found that elevated insulin, or “hyperinsulinemia,” significantly increases your risk of Alzheimer’s. On the other hand, people with type 1 diabetes, who don’t make insulin at all, are also thought to have a higher risk of Alzheimer’s. How could these both be true?

Schilling posits this happens because of the insulin-degrading enzyme, a product of insulin that breaks down both insulin and amyloid proteins in the brain—the same proteins that clump up and lead to Alzheimer’s disease. People who don’t have enough insulin, like those whose bodies’ ability to produce insulin has been tapped out by diabetes, aren’t going to make enough of this enzyme to break up those brain clumps. Meanwhile, in people who use insulin to treat their diabetes and end up with a surplus of insulin, most of this enzyme gets used up breaking that insulin down, leaving not enough enzyme to address those amyloid brain clumps.

According to Schilling, this can happen even in people who don’t have diabetes yet—who are in a state known as “prediabetes.” It simply means your blood sugar is higher than normal, and it’s something that affects roughly 86 million Americans.

Schilling is not primarily a medical researcher; she’s just interested in the topic. But Rosebud Roberts, a professor of epidemiology and neurology at the Mayo Clinic, agreed with her interpretation.

In a 2012 study, Roberts broke nearly 1,000 people down into four groups based on how much of their diet came from carbohydrates. The group that ate the most carbs had an 80 percent higher chance of developing mild cognitive impairment—a pit stop on the way to dementia—than those who ate the smallest amount of carbs. People with mild cognitive impairment, or MCI, can dress and feed themselves, but they have trouble with more complex tasks. Intervening in MCI can help prevent dementia.

Rebecca Gottesman, a professor of neurology at Johns Hopkins, cautions that the findings on carbs aren’t as well-established as those on diabetes. “It’s hard to be sure at this stage, what an ‘ideal’ diet would look like,” she said. “There’s a suggestion that a Mediterranean diet, for example, may be good for brain health.”

But she says there are several theories out there to explain the connection between high blood sugar and dementia. Diabetes can also weaken the blood vessels, which increases the likelihood that you’ll have ministrokes in the brain, causing various forms of dementia. A high intake of simple sugars can make cells, including those in the brain, insulin resistant, which could cause the brain cells to die. Meanwhile, eating too much in general can cause obesity. The extra fat in obese people releases cytokines, or inflammatory proteins that can also contribute to cognitive deterioration, Roberts said. In one study by Gottesman, obesity doubled a person’s risk of having elevated amyloid proteins in their brains later in life.

Roberts said that people with type 1 diabetes are mainly only at risk if their insulin is so poorly controlled that they have hypoglycemic episodes. But even people who don’t have any kind of diabetes should watch their sugar intake, she said.

“Just because you don’t have type 2 diabetes doesn’t mean you can eat whatever carbs you want,” she said. “Especially if you’re not active.” What we eat, she added, is “a big factor in maintaining control of our destiny.” Roberts said this new study by Xie is interesting because it also shows an association between prediabetes and cognitive decline.

That’s an important point that often gets forgotten in discussions of Alzheimer’s. It’s such a horrible disease that it can be tempting to dismiss it as inevitable. And, of course, there are genetic and other, non-nutritional factors that contribute to its progression. But, as these and other researchers point out, decisions we make about food are one risk factor we can control. And it’s starting to look like decisions we make while we’re still relatively young can affect our future cognitive health.

“Alzheimer’s is like a slow-burning fire that you don’t see when it starts,” Schilling said. It takes time for clumps to form and for cognition to begin to deteriorate. “By the time you see the signs, it’s way too late to put out the fire.”

 

Olga Khazan is a staff writer at The Atlanti
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Re: Diabetes news for Summer 2019

You can tell the article right below me is not a scientific study. Type 2 is caused by other things and weight is just one of them

 

However, it is interesting to see the relationship between carbs and Alzheimer's..diabetes can cause many other diseases and conditions

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Re: Diabetes news for Summer 2019

Type 2 Diabetes Causes Genetics and Lifestyle Choices Play a Role

Type 2 diabetes has several causes: genetics and lifestyle are the most important ones. A combination of these factors can cause insulin resistance, when your body doesn’t use insulin as well as it should. Insulin resistance is the most common cause of type 2 diabetes.

Genetics Play a Role in Type 2 Diabetes
Type 2 diabetes can be hereditary. That doesn’t mean that if your mother or father has (or had) type 2 diabetes, you’re guaranteed to develop it; instead, it means that you have a greater chance of developing type 2.
 
Researchers know that you can inherit a risk for type 2 diabetes, but it’s difficult to pinpoint which genes carry the risk. The medical community is hard at work trying to figure out the certain genetic mutations that lead to a risk of type 2.
 
 
 
Lifestyle Is Very Important, Too

Genes do play a role in type 2 diabetes, but lifestyle choices are also important. You can, for example, have a genetic mutation that may make you susceptible to type 2, but if you take good care of your body, you may not develop diabetes.

Say that two people have the same genetic mutation. One of them eats well, watches their cholesterol, and stays physically fit, and the other is overweight (BMI greater than 25) and inactive. The person who is overweight and inactive is much more likely to develop type 2 diabetes because certain lifestyle choices greatly influence how well your body uses insulin.

 

 

 
Lifestyle choices that affect the development of type 2 diabetes include:
  • Lack of exercise: Physical activity has many benefits—one of them being that it can help you avoid type 2 diabetes, if you’re susceptible.
  • Unhealthy meal planning choices: A meal plan filled with high-fat foods and lacking in fiber (which you can get from grains, vegetables, and fruits) increases the likelihood of type 2.
  • Overweight/Obesity: Lack of exercise and unhealthy meal planning choices can lead to obesity, or make it worse. Being overweight makes it more likely that you’ll become insulin resistant and can also lead to many other health conditions.
Insulin Resistance
That combination of factors—genetic susceptibility and lifestyle choices—leads to insulin resistance. If your body is insulin resistant, it doesn’t use insulin properly.
 
Your body may produce enough insulin to transport the glucose to the cells (you can read more about how insulin works in our article on insulin), but unfortunately, the body resists that insulin.

Glucose builds up in the blood when you are insulin resistant, leading to the symptoms associated with type 2 diabetes.
 
In type 2 diabetes, genetics and lifestyle play a role in causing your body to become insulin resistant.
 
Type 2 Diabetes Isn’t Always Caused by Insulin Resistance
Insulin resistance is the most common cause of type 2 diabetes, but it is possible to have type 2 and not be insulin resistant. You can have a form of type 2 where you body simply doesn’t produce enough insulin; that’s not as common. Researchers aren’t sure what exactly keeps some people from producing enough insulin, but that’s another thing they’re working hard to figure out.
 
Type 2 Risk Factors
There are risk factors that have been linked to type 2, and you can learn more about them (and see if you’re at risk) in our type 2 diabetes risk factors article.

 

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Re: Diabetes news for Summer 2019

4 Things I Wish People Understood About Type 2 DiabetesShare on Pinterest

I’ve had type 2 diabetes for more than 18 years, and I’ve been writing about it for almost half of that time. Over the years, I’ve realized there are many things people don’t understand about diabetes. Here are four of them.

1. “Diabetic” should not be used as a noun

I may have diabetes, but please don’t call me a “diabetic.” I am a wife, stepmother, daughter, sister, aunt, sister-in-law, niece, cousin, friend, business owner, cook, writer, recipe developer, photographer, freelancer, rental home owner, bookkeeper, fitness enthusiast, traveler, advocate, reader, sports fan, and support group leader (among other things) — but I am not a “diabetic.” It breaks my heart when I hear stories about kids, especially, who are called “the diabetic” at school. For example, “Go get the diabetic. It’s time for his shot.” We are people with diabetes and we are all so much more.

2. Type 1 and type 2 are not the same
 

Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disorder. It causes the body to attack the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas. This means that a person with type 1 makes no insulin. Without insulin, you die. People with type 1 must inject insulin to stay alive. People with type 2 diabetes produce insulin, but their bodies don’t use it very well. Over time, their insulin-producing cells may give up from exhaustion. Type 2 can be managed with lifestyle changes, medication, and sometimes insulin. In addition, there’s another type of diabetes known as latent autoimmune diabetes in adults (LADA), sometimes called type 1.5. This condition has characteristics of both type 1 and type 2. It’s really annoying when someone finds out you have diabetes and asks: “Is it the bad kind?” None of them are good.

3. Everyone’s diabetes is different

There is no one-size-fits-all diabetes management plan. Even if you find something that works, it may not 10 years down the road. Once I could easily eat 60 to 70 grams of carbohydrates at a meal; now I’m lucky if 40 grams keeps me in range. Other people with diabetes may only eat that much in an entire day. Everyone’s diabetes is different. For some of us, eating sweet foods, pasta, or potatoes in moderation is perfectly fine. We don’t appreciate comments like Should you really be eating that? We know how to best manage our own diets, thank you very much.

 
4. I didn’t get diabetes because I ate too much sugar

I really hate hearing jokes that go something like this: “That cake was so sweet, I thought I was going to get diabetes.” Repeat after me: Eating sugar does not cause diabetes. While it’s true that being overweight and not exercising regularly can increase your risk for type 2 diabetes, there are many other factors that contribute as well: age, genetics, and being of certain ethnic backgrounds, to name a few. Please get over the misconception that those of us with diabetes are fat, lazy, and sit on the couch eating cookies all day, or that we “did this to ourselves” because of poor lifestyle choices.

 
 

The takeaway

In the United States, there are currently more than 30 million people with diabetes and 84 million with prediabetes. The more we all understand about what diabetes is — and what it isn’t — the better off everyone will be.

 
 

 

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Re: Diabetes news for Summer 2019

In 2007, Patrice Cani (FNRS-WELBIO researcher) and his team at the Louvain Drug Research Institute of University of Louvain, in close collaboration with Willem de Vos, professor at UWageningen, discovered the beneficial effects of an intestinal bacteria, Akkermansia muciniphila, able to moderate the development of obesity and type 2 diabetes, in mice. In 2017, the team discovered (still in the mouse) that the use of a pasteurized form of Akkermansia leads to an even greater protection than the living bacterium regarding various cardiovascular disease risk factors such as insulin resistance, hypercholesterolemia, or the storage of fat in adipose tissue.

Following these discoveries, the UCLouvain team, in collaboration with the Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc, developed a clinical study in order to administer the bacteria to humans. For this, it was necessary to develop the capacity to produce the bacterium in large quantity and to make sure that the tests would be without risk for the participants.

The UCLouvain researchers administered Akkermansia to overweight or obese volunteers, all displaying insulin resistance (pre-diabetes type 2) and metabolic syndrome, in other words, having several elevated risk factors for cardiovascular diseases. The volunteers were randomly divided into 3 groups (placebo, live bacteria and pasteurized bacteria) and were asked not to change their dietary habits or their physical activity. Akkermansia was provided as a nutritional supplement.

The primary goal of this UCLouvain study was to demonstrate the feasibility of daily ingesting Akkermansia for 3 months, without risk. Clara Depommier and Amandine Everard, UCLouvain researchers, observed excellent compliance (the supplements were easy to ingest) and tolerance (there were no side effects) in the groups taking live or pasteurized bacteria.

The conclusions are clear: the tests in humans confirm what had already been observed in mice. Ingestion of the (pasteurized) bacterium prevented the deterioration of the health status of the subjects (pre-diabetes, cardiovascular risks). Even better, the researchers observed a decrease in inflammation markers in the liver, a slight decrease in the body weight of the subjects (2.3 kg on average) as well as a lowering of cholesterol levels. In contrast, the metabolic parameters (insulin resistance or hypercholesterolemia) in placebo subjects continued to deteriorate over time.

Who does it benefit? According to the WHO, one in three people die every day from cardiovascular disease worldwide. In Western countries, one in two people is overweight and has increased cardiovascular risks. This research of the UCLouvain would limit these risks and therefore potentially have an impact (limit the effects) on half of the population, if properly used.

In conclusion, this pilot study demonstrates the feasibility of administrating (pasteurized) Akkermansia bacteria to humans in the form of a food supplement and reports encouraging results on the effectiveness of the Akkermansia-based dietary supplements to reduce cardio-metabolic risk factors. These results pave the way for a large-scale study, to confirm/elaborate these first results, but also endorse the commercialization of the bacteria as food supplements, by 2021.


Story Source:

Materials provided by Université catholique de Louvain. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


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Re: Diabetes news for Summer 2019

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Hello, my name is Andrew Boulton, professor of medicine, University of Manchester, UK, and visiting professor, University of Miami, Florida.

I'm also incoming president of the International Diabetes Federation (IDF).

And I think that we need to remember the seriousness of diabetes. And across the world we need to raise the profile of diabetes, equal or even above that, for example of cancer, another chronic and feared disease.

 

The statistics for diabetes, as you all know, are horrendous.

Last November we marked 100 years since the end of the First World War. And it was estimated that about 4.5 million, or thereabouts, were killed each year during the first world war on the battlefield.

But if you look at statistics for diabetes, there are more than that number, dying each year from diabetes and its complications across the world.

So we really need to take diabetes seriously. We can no longer go on saying this is a touch of sugar, my grandmother had it. It'll be OK.

 

Data that we've published from my group in Manchester, looking at patients with diabetes with chronic renal failure, with end stage disease on dialysis, the outcome for these patients is that 50% will be dead within 2 years.

If they also have a foot problem, and for example have lost a toe or part of a foot, 3 out of 4 of these patients are dead within 2 years.

So we really need to take diabetes, seriously. Primary prevention, that is preventing those at high risk from going on to develop diabetes, screening of high-risk groups: certain ethnic groups, where there's obviously morbid obesity, there is inactivity, family history of diabetes, and so on. So we really need to be proactive in primary prevention.

In the UK in secondary prevention it has been shown that bringing in the mass screening for diabetic retinopathy with a retinal photograph taken each year has taken diabetes off the number one spot for the cause of blindness in young-aged adults.

 

So secondary is preventing those who have diabetes from getting late complications. We know how to do that, glycaemic control, etc.

 

And tertiary prevention, if you've got neuropathy for example, is preventing them going on to get a foot ulcer.

 

So we need to be proactive in prevention, raising the profile of diabetes as a serious and life-threatening disease in its late stages that needs to be taken as seriously as we take cancer.

 

And I think that's the message for governments across the world in the next 2 years, when I'll be looking after the IDF. Thank you.