The causes of diabetes and how it ravages the body is
sobering. The shocking reality of diabetes is that despite all of the medical
advances and its worldwide prevalence it continues on a skyward rise into the
stratosphere. As if that is not sobering enough the facts listed below will
help bring the point home.
- Nearly 26 million children and adults in the United States (nearly 8.5 % of the population) have diabetes
- 79 million Americans are thought to be prediabetic
- 1.9 million Americans are diagnosed with diabetes every year
- Nearly 10% of the entire U.S. population has diabetes, including over 25% of seniors
- As many as 1 in 3 American adults will have diabetes in 2050 if present trends continue
- The economic cost of diagnosed diabetes in the U.S. is $245 billion per year
- 1.9 million Americans aged 20 years or older are newly diagnosed with diabetes each year (5,205/day)
- Compared to non-Hispanic whites the risk of diagnosed is 1.2 times higher among Asian Americans, 1.7 times higher among Hispanic Americans, and 1.8 times higher among African Americans
- Diabetes is the primary cause of death for 71,382 Americans each year
- Diabetes contributes to the death of 231,404 Americans annually (combining death certificates that list diabetes as the primary and a contributing cause of death)
- $245 billion annually attributable to diagnosed diabetes, including $176 billion in direct costs and $69 billion in indirect costs (disability, work loss, premature mortality)
- People with diagnosed diabetes have health care costs 2.3 times higher than what expenditures would be in the absence of diabetes
- About 60% to 70% of people with diabetes have mild to severe forms of neuropathy
- More than 60% of nontraumatic lower-limb amputations occur in people with diabetes
- About 65,700 nontraumatic lower-limb amputations are performed in people with diabetes annually (180/day)
- Diabetes is the leading cause of kidney failure, accounting for 44% of all new cases of kidney failure
- Adults with diabetes have heart disease death rates about 2 to 4 times higher than adults without diabetes, and the risk for stroke is 2 to 4 times higher among people with diabetes
- Diabetes is the leading cause of new cases of blindness among adults aged 20–74 years
- The prevalence of diagnosed diabetes in the U.S. increased by 128% from 1988 to 2008
- Diabetes kills more Americans every year than AIDS and breast cancer combined
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