From Reuters
CDC report says 29 million Americans have diabetes
BY DAVID BEASLEY
ATLANTA Tue Jun 10, 2014
(Reuters) - The number of American adults with diabetes has soared to 29 million with another 86 million at high risk of getting the chronic disease, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Tuesday.
The CDC report, based on data from 2012, illustrated a continued worrisome rise in diabetes, which can cause serious health complications including heart disease, stroke, kidney failure, blindness, amputation of toes, feet or legs, and premature death.
If the current trends continue, federal health officials predicted that one in five Americans could have diabetes by 2025 - and one in three by 2050. The CDC said more than 12 percent of U.S adults had diabetes as of 2012.
"We simply can't sustain this trajectory," said Ann Albright, director of the CDC's Division of Diabetes Translation.
The report said that diabetes and its related complications accounted for $245 billion in total medical costs and lost work and wages in 2012.
The CDC said the 29 million with diabetes in 2012 marked an increase of 3 million since 2010.
Read more from Reuters >>
CDC report says 29 million Americans have diabetes
BY DAVID BEASLEY
ATLANTA Tue Jun 10, 2014
(Reuters) - The number of American adults with diabetes has soared to 29 million with another 86 million at high risk of getting the chronic disease, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Tuesday.
The CDC report, based on data from 2012, illustrated a continued worrisome rise in diabetes, which can cause serious health complications including heart disease, stroke, kidney failure, blindness, amputation of toes, feet or legs, and premature death.
If the current trends continue, federal health officials predicted that one in five Americans could have diabetes by 2025 - and one in three by 2050. The CDC said more than 12 percent of U.S adults had diabetes as of 2012.
"We simply can't sustain this trajectory," said Ann Albright, director of the CDC's Division of Diabetes Translation.
The report said that diabetes and its related complications accounted for $245 billion in total medical costs and lost work and wages in 2012.
The CDC said the 29 million with diabetes in 2012 marked an increase of 3 million since 2010.
Read more from Reuters >>
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