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When you look at the list of risk factors
for developing type 2 diabetes you may see that there are some that you can
control. Among them, being overweight and being inactive.
According to a recent report released by
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, almost 90 percent of diabetes are
type 2, the form directly linked to obesity.
The latest government statistics have also
revealed that West Virginia, South
Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Texas
and Tennessee
had the highest rates of diabetes – 11 cases per 1,000 people. West Virginia was the
hardest hit, with 12.7 new diabetes cases for every 1,000 residents. According
to a report released by the CDC in July, 25.6 percent of all Americans are
obese, which puts them at risk for high blood pressure, diabetes and heart
disease. The percentage is even worse in the South. In Alabama
the obesity rate reached 30.3 percent and in Tennessee 30.1 percent. Minnesota,
Hawaii and Wyoming had the lowest rates, about 5/6 per
1,000 people.
“The risk factors for type 2 diabetes
include obesity and inactivity, and we know the South has a high prevalence of
both obesity and physical inactivity when compared to the other regions in the United States,”
said study author Karen Kirtland, a data analyst in the US CDC’s Division of
Diabetes Translation.
A patient with type 2 diabetes is slowly
losing the ability to correctly use insulin in order to convert sugar into
energy. As a consequence, the sugar level grows threatening to damage the eye
and the kidneys. The high level of sugar can also lead to heart diseases,
kidney failure and limb amputations. Diabetes is more common in African
Americans, Latinos, Native Americans, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.
Studies emphasize the important role of
physical activity in public health efforts to combat obesity. Recent studies
have shown that 50 to 60 minutes of exercise a week or at least 55 minutes of
exercise are enough for people who have lost weight and are trying to keep the
weight off. Approximately 30 minutes a day, five days a week, of brisk walking
should burn about 1,000 calories, researchers say.
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