ATLANTA, March 3 (UPI) -- Most people are not aware if they are
pre-diabetic and most who know they are are not doing anything about it, U.S.
health officials found.
Study leader Linda Geiss of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in
Atlanta said survey data indicates almost 30 percent of U.S. adults age 20 and
older had pre-diabetes, a metabolic syndrome -- but only 7.3 percent were aware
of their pre-diabetes status.
"Reversing the growing diabetes problem will require multiple levels of
interventions, including promotion of healthy lifestyles and increased
availability of evidence-based community prevention programs for people at high
risk," Geiss says in a statement. "More efficient identification and awareness
of pre-diabetes is a key first step to implementing these changes."
Geiss and colleagues analyzed survey data from 1,402 adults with pre-diabetes
who participated in the 2005-2006 National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey who were interviewed and given a fasting plasma glucose test and an Oral
Glucose Tolerance Test.
Although diabetes can be prevented or delayed among adults at high risk via
proper nutrition, modest weight loss and increased physical activity, only about
half of U.S. adults with pre-diabetes reported they tried to lose weight or
exercise more in the past year, the study said.
The study, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, also said
adults with pre-diabetes were also more likely to have higher levels of
cardiovascular disease risk factors such as higher mean weight, waist
circumference and higher blood pressure.
Source : United Press International