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Subject:
From:
Nikki Lee <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Lactation Information and Discussion <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 26 Aug 2003 17:33:48 EDT
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Dear Friends:
     Of course, increasing rates of artificial infant feeding have nothing to
do with this.....(tongue firmly in cheek)

World facing diabetes catastrophe - experts

By Emelia Sithole

PARIS (Reuters) - More than 300 million people worldwide are at risk of
developing diabetes and the disease's economic impact in some hard-hit countries
could be higher than that of the AIDS pandemic, diabetes experts warned Monday.

In a report released at the International Diabetes Federation conference in
Paris, experts estimate the annual healthcare costs of diabetes worldwide for
people aged 20 to 79 are at least $153 billion.

"In some countries with a higher incidence, diabetes has a higher economic
impact than AIDS," Williams Rhys, professor of clinical epidemiology at the
University of Wales, told a news conference.

According to the Diabetes Atlas report, total direct healthcare spending on
the disease worldwide will be between $213 billion and $396 billion by 2025, if
predictions are correct that the number of people with diabetes will rise to
333 million by 2025 from 194 million.

Diabetes occurs in two basic forms: type I, which occurs in children and
adolescents and accounts for five-10 percent of all diabetes cases, and the more
common type II, or adult onset diabetes.

Patients with type I diabetes do not produce enough insulin while those with
type II produce insulin but cannot use it effectively. Adult onset diabetes
can often be prevented or controlled in its early stages with careful diet and
exercise, but patients often need a range of drugs to control it.

Diabetes can lead to blindness, kidney failure, heart disease, disability and
death.

HEALTHIER FOODS

More than 75 percent of diabetes cases are expected to be in developing
countries by 2025 because of rapid culture and social changes as well as increasing
urbanization. This is expected to further burden healthcare systems already
stretched by the AIDS pandemic.

"What AIDS was in the last 20 years of the 20th century, diabetes is going to
be in the first 20 years of this century," said Paul Zimmet, foundation
director of the International Diabetes Institute.

Zimmet and other experts say the diabetes epidemic will be fueled by an
estimated 314 million people with impaired glucose tolerance, known as IGT, or
higher than normal blood glucose levels -- a high risk condition for developing
type II diabetes.

They also warn that type II diabetes was increasing in children and
adolescents in many countries and is linked to rising obesity. They urged food
companies -- especially those who make fast foods -- to produce healthier foods and
governments to set up national campaigns to combat diabetes.

"We are running out of time," IDF President-elect Pierre Lefebvre warned
during a news conference.

"If action is not taken now to stop the rise in diabetes, there is a
significant risk that governments and social security systems may fail to ensure the
appropriate care to the millions who will be affected by diabetes in 2025," he
said.


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