Diabetes
causes 1.5 mn deaths a year: UN chief
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on
Thursday said diabetes now causes some 1.5 million deaths a year, and called
for healthier lifestyles on this year's World Health Day. Diabetes is an
ancient disease that is taking a growing toll on the modern world, Xinhua
quoted Ban as saying in his message to mark the day.
Ban said that in 1980, 108 million adults were living with diabetes. By 2014, that number had risen to 422 million -- 8.5 percent of adults -- reflecting a global increase in risk factors such as being overweight or obese.
"Even though we have the tools to prevent and treat it, diabetes now causes some 1.5 million deaths a year. High blood glucose causes an additional 2.2 million deaths," he noted.
The UN secretary-general also pointed
out that "the burden of diabetes is not equally shared, within or between
countries. People in low- and middle-income countries are disproportionately
affected, but wherever we find poverty we also find disease and premature
deaths."
"We can limit the spread and
impact of diabetes by promoting and adopting healthier lifestyles, especially
among young people," he said. "We must also improve diabetes
diagnosis and access to essential medicines such as insulin."
To do this, Ban underlined the
cooperation among governments, healthcare providers, people with diabetes,
civil society, food producers and manufacturers and suppliers of medicines and
technology, saying that they must all contribute to changing the status quo. Ban
called for global efforts to "halt the rise in diabetes and improve the
lives of those living with this dangerous but preventable and treatable
disease".
Last year, governments adopted the Sustainable Development Goals, which include the target of reducing premature mortality from non-communicable diseases, which include diabetes, by one-third. The theme of this year's World Health Day was "beat diabetes".
Source: www.timesofindia.com
09.04.2016
Defeat never comes to any man until he admits it
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