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Item
#4
Government Labels IGT as
“Pre-Diabetes”
Tommy
Thompson said that people with pre-diabetes can take meaningful
steps now to reduce their risks and avoid having diabetes."
The new
message is that most middle-aged people should be tested during
their next visit to the doctor to find if they have
"pre-diabetes," a type of high blood sugar that puts them at super
high risk of getting full-blown diabetes, say new guidelines.
The
government yesterday for the first time urged overweight Americans
to get tested for a newly defined condition called "pre-diabetes"
as part of a campaign to stem a growing epidemic of diabetes in
the United States.
The
recommendation was prompted by the recent recognition that people
who are at risk of developing diabetes can be identified and their
risk of going on to develop the full-blown disease can be cut
substantially by weight loss and exercise.
The
rising incidence of diabetes in the United States is the result of
a dramatic increase in obesity, as well as the aging of the
population. The latest figures show that in addition to the
estimated 17 million Americans who have full-blown diabetes, at
least an additional 16 million have "pre-diabetes," Thompson said.
People
with pre-diabetes have levels of glucose (a sugar in the
bloodstream) that are higher than normal but not high enough to be
classified as diabetes. It causes no symptoms, but without
treatment most people with the condition go on to develop
diabetes, which is the sixth leading cause of death in the United
States and a major contributing cause of heart disease, stroke,
kidney failure, high blood pressure and blindness.
A new
campaign, sponsored by HHS and the American Diabetes Association
(ADA), seeks to inform the public and health care professionals
about the need to identify and treat pre-diabetes.
"Some
people have . . . become fatalistic, believing diabetes is
inescapable," said Judith Fradkin of the National Institutes of
Health. "Those are the people we most need to reach with this
message that diabetes can be stopped."
Thompson
said HHS will also try to persuade health insurers and employers
to pay for testing and treatment to prevent diabetes, a disease
that is estimated to cost the U.S. economy $100 billion annually.
Except for certain screening tests mandated by Congress, the
federal Medicare program does not pay for preventive treatment.
According
to the new recommendations, pre-diabetes can be diagnosed by
either of two blood tests. A fasting plasma glucose (FPG) test
measures the level of glucose in the bloodstream after an
overnight fast. A two-hour oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT)
includes the FPG test and measures the glucose level two hours
after the person being tested drinks a solution containing
glucose.
The
guidelines state that testing is strongly recommended for anyone
who is 44 or older and overweight (defined as a Body Mass Index of
25 or higher). They say doctors should also consider testing
people older than 44 who have no risk factors, as well as younger
adults who are overweight and who have at least one other risk
factor for diabetes.
If the
test for pre-diabetes is normal, it should be repeated every three
years, according to the recommendations. If pre-diabetes is
diagnosed, the patient should receive counseling on weight loss
and increasing exercise and should be monitored every year or two
for possible diabetes.
"Just 30
minutes of walking a day, five days a week, can significantly
reduce the risk of developing diabetes," Thompson said.
In the
Finnish study, the goal was to have participants lose 5 percent of
their body weight and exercise moderately for 150 minutes each
week. In the U.S. study, the exercise goal was the same but the
weight loss goal was 7 percent of body weight.
Participants in both studies received considerable incentives,
such as nutritional counseling, exercise classes, meal plans and
sometimes gifts such as exercise equipment or gym memberships.
Even so, in the U.S. study only 50 percent reached the weight loss
goal and in the Finnish study, only 43 percent. Seventy-four
percent of participants in the U.S. study and 36 percent in the
Finnish study reached their exercise goal.
Thompson
and other speakers at the briefing acknowledged that such
lifestyle changes are difficult for many people. Thompson promised
to recruit actors and athletes to help in the campaign against
diabetes and to send the administration's new surgeon general,
Richard H. Carmona, "out on the road" if his appointment is
confirmed. The guidelines are published in the April issue of the
journal Diabetes Care.
===============================
News Flash:
The
incidence of obesity among adults has doubled since 1980 and
overweight among adolescents has tripled in that time frame
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