From AJC?..
The number of children and teens with type 1 and type 2 diabetes is expected to spike dramatically in the next 40 years, creating what one expert calls a potential catastrophe for the nation?s health care system.
Rates of type 2 diabetes could increase four times over the next 40 years, and rates of type 1 diabetes may triple, the new CDC report says. The CDC?s numbers assume that the rate of diabetes will increase over time.
Even if the rates stay as they are now, the number of children and teens with type 2 diabetes is projected to climb by almost 50% over the same period, and the number with type 1 diabetes will rise by 23%.
Right now, about 215,000, or 0.26%, of this age group under 20 years old have diabetes. The spike in both type 1 and 2 will be particularly high among minorities.
?Diabetes is clearly increasing at an unacceptable rate, and while we are doing a whole lot better in terms of treating it, we simply can?t keep up,? says American Diabetes Association Chief Scientific and Medical Officer Robert E. Ratner, MD. ?The simple fact is we are losing the battle by not preventing this disease.?
Just two decades ago, type 2 diabetes was almost never seen in children, but it has become more common with higher rates of childhood obesity, Ratner says.
Public health efforts that address the childhood obesity epidemic could have a profound impact on the future of type 2 diabetes, Ratner noted in an editorial published with the CDC report in the December issue of the journal Diabetes Care.
Type 1 Rates Rising Among Minorities
Type 1 diabetes is not linked to obesity and little is known about how to prevent it.
It is also not clear why rates are rising, says Sharon Saydah, PhD, of the CDC.
The disease has historically been diagnosed mostly among whites in the U.S., but this is changing, Saydah says.
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Source: http://www.lensaunders.com/wp/?p=7212
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