Take Charge and Manage Diabetes

Diabetes is a chronic health condition that affects how your body turns food into energy and characterized by elevated levels of blood sugar. When your blood sugar rises, it triggers your pancreas to release insulin which allow sugar to be used as energy in your cells.
If you are diabetic, your body either doesn’t make enough insulin or cells stop responding to insulin, causes too much blood sugar stays in your bloodstream. Over time, it may lead to serious damage to the heart, blood vessels, eyes, kidneys and nerves.
World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates there were 422 million adults with diabetes worldwide in 2014. The age-adjusted prevalence in adults rose from 4.7% in 1980 to 8.5% in 2014, with the greatest increase in low- and middle-income countries, and 1.6 million deaths are directly attributed to diabetes each year. Both the number of cases and the prevalence of diabetes have been steadily increasing over the past few decades.
The most common type of diabetes mellitus is type 2 diabetes (T2DM), usually in adults, which occurs when the body becomes resistant to insulin. In the past three decades the prevalence of type 2 diabetes has risen drastically in countries of all income levels. Most people with T2DM are overweight or obese, which either causes or aggravates insulin resistance. Many of those who are not obese by BMI criteria have a higher proportion of body fat distributed predominantly in the abdominal region, indicating visceral adiposity, compared to people without diabetes. It is estimated that a significant percentage of cases of type 2 diabetes mellitus (49%) are undiagnosed. This may due to symptoms in type 2 diabetes mellitus are often not severe, or may be absent, owing to the slow pace at which the hyperglycaemia is worsening.
Whereas, type 1 diabetes mellitus, once known as juvenile diabetes or insulin-dependent diabetes, characterized by the body’s inability to produce insulin due to the autoimmune destruction of the beta cells in the pancreas. Type 1 diabetes mellitus is more likely to present with symptoms and its onset is typically in young age. Lifestyle modification is always the most important and cost-effective fundamental aspect of diabetes control and long-term care management. Diabetes control and management can be divided into 2 major aspect: the non-pharmacological management and the pharmacological management.
There are no simple solutions for diabetes control and management but coordinated multicomponent interventions can make a significant improvement and delay of diabetes related complication. Everyone has a role to play in diabetes control and management – people with diabetes, family members, health-care providers, government as well as civil society, food producers, and manufacturers and suppliers of medicines and technology are all stakeholders. Collectively, they can all make a significant contribution to halt the rise in diabetes and improve the lives of those living with the disease.
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