Logo
WeightWatchers.com.my
Weight Management through Wellness
 
Home      Health News

Health NewsBites

Diet, Exercise Thwart Diabetes: Study

 

WEDNESDAY, Oct. 28 (HealthDay News) -- Diet and exercise can keep diabetes at bay for a decade, cutting the risk for the disease by more than a third in the most susceptible people, a new study finds.

 

About 11 percent of U.S. adults (24 million) have diabetes, mostly type 2, which is linked to poor diet and sedentary lifestyle. In addition, 57 million overweight adults have higher-than-normal blood sugar levels, which raise the risk of a heart attack or stroke and the likelihood of developing type 2 diabetes, researchers say.

 

But new research, published in the Oct. 29 online edition of The Lancet, shows that losing weight and exercising can delay or prevent the onset of diabetes more effectively than the prescription drug metformin or a placebo.

"Interventions that result in weight loss lower the risk of diabetes, and that lower risk appears to persist for a long period of time," said study author Dr. William C. Knowler of the U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

 

Statistics: numbers looking for a fight

  • 32%: percentage of American men 20 years old and above who are obese. 
| source |
  • 35%: percentage of American women 20 years old and above who are obese. 
| source |
  • 18%: percentage of women in the US 18 years old and above who currently smoke. 
| source |
  • 30%: deaths among Americans 65 years old and older due to heart diseases.
| source |