BREAKING NEWS ::::: Diabetes deaths exceed 100,000 in US for second straight year: Report

[SIZE=7]Diabetes deaths exceed 100,000 in US for second straight year: Report[/SIZE]
Diabetes deaths increased 15 percent from 2019.

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[li]Diabetes deaths have exceeded 100,000 in the United States for the second consecutive year.[/li][li]Approximately 37 million Americans have diabetes, while 96 million U.S. adults are prediabetic.[/li][li]Those who struggle to control their diabetes are twice as likely to die of COVID-19.[/li][/ul]
Diabetes deaths have exceeded 100,000 in the United States for the second consecutive year, according to a report by Reuters.
Reuters analyzed exclusive data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to compare the number of diabetics and diabetes-related deaths in the U.S. over recent years.
Diabetes was the seventh-leading cause of death in the U.S. in 2019 and was responsible for more than 87,000 deaths. In 2020, deaths due to diabetes increased by 17 percent from 2019, to more than 100,000 deaths. In 2021, diabetes-related deaths also surpassed 100,000, increasing 15 percent from 2019. This data excludes deaths of diabetics that were ruled to have been caused by COVID-19.
“The large number of diabetes deaths for a second year in a row is certainly a cause for alarm,” Paul Hsu, an epidemiologist at UCLA’s Fielding School of Public Health, told Reuters.

The exponential costs diabetes patients face to acquire doctor’s visits and medications has forced many to ration their insulin — a hormone that regulates blood glucose levels, used as a drug to manage diabetes — or forgo the necessary treatments altogether. Insulin costs on average 800 percent more in the U.S. than in similar developed countries.

President Biden’s Build Back Better Act includes provisions to cap the cost of insulin at $35. However, the plan is facing criticism from patients and advocates, as it only applies to patients using Medicare or those who have private group or individual health insurance plans.

Approximately 37 million Americans, or 11 percent of the U.S. population, have diabetes, while 96 million U.S. adults are prediabetic, and the numbers continue to rise.
The increasing number of Americans who have diabetes, coupled with the struggles to purchase insulin and access medical treatment has left diabetics at a greater disadvantage amid the coronavirus pandemic. According to the report, those who struggle to control their diabetes are twice as likely to die of COVID-19.

Meanwhile, further job losses due to the coronavirus pandemic has only further complicated diabetes patients’ efforts to afford their medications and medical needs.
“People with diabetes and other chronic illnesses were already facing challenges well before the pandemic hit, and COVID has only made these problems worse,” Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), chairwoman of the Senate Health Committee, told Reuters in a statement. “It is absolutely crucial to research and find solutions to better support diabetes patients and get them the care they need.”

diabetes is a genetic disease but the sun cannot set without those people holding a can of soft drink, processed food taken with mysterious syrups, processed meat etc. Everything there is mechanized too. they believe in machines. they will soon make a machine to sleep on their behalf.

Yes and no. Only in Type 2 Diabetes which can be hereditary. That doesn’t mean that if a mother or father has (or had) type 2 diabetes, one’s guaranteed to develop it but they have a greater chance of developing type 2. Hio ya muricans,judging by the numbers,is definately lifestyle

swala nyeti …kwani it’s negroes dieing in u.s.a ? 100,000 dead people in 2021 si wachache

Why is diabetes higher in African Americans?

Genetic traits, the prevalence of obesity, and insulin resistance all contribute to the risk of diabetes in the African American community. African Americans have a high rate of diabetic complications, because of poor glycaemic control and racial disparities in health care in the USA.

Burgers,fried meat ,no greens or fruits ,zero exercise = obesity = diabetes

Type I diabetis. Which is reversible.

Type 1 is not reversible…
Type 2 is preventable and reversible

Many low income families in the USA live in vegetable deserts. You will get a fast food outlet around every corner, but hardly a place that sells groceries. If you do find one, the veges are more expensive than just grabbing a burger.

mcdowels kila corner

baaad diet for the most part.

Pia hapa kenya kuna rise in diabetes. Hizi fast food we are eating ndio chanzo. Saa hii i have started reducing my carb intakes. Chips nimepiga X. Soda pia huwa si kunywi,chai nakunywa ndufia.
Lunch huwa nakula njahi na cabbage.
Diabetic is a silent killer. When kidney is gone and you are put on dialysis. That when you realise you are living on a borrowed time.

Lifestyle problems ndo hizi.

Hiyo hakuna. There’s no place that doesn’t sell vegetables. If someone doesn’t eat veges, it’s his choice. It’s very easy to live a sedentary lifestyle.

The Fructose in Fruit is still simple sugar. Binging on fruits is also detrimental. Hizo Burgers na fast foods ndo chanzo and if they are doing a healthy diet ni hizo so called fruit and veggie smoothies. Equally a problem disguised as healthy living

Food desert - Wikipedia

UPUSS. I drove through many inner cities and never once encountered a place without vegetables. Most people could even have them delivered for free ( before the advent of Uber).

Ubishi wa nini? If a store selling veges is more than one mile away, and a burger king or subway is just around the bend…