Editorial
Diabetes: Halt The Rise Now!
Last Thursday, April 7, this year, the global
community, in line with the United Nations
declaration observed the World Health Day, with a focus on strategies to halt the alarming rise in diabetes and its negative effect on human health and socio-economic activities.
With the theme: “Halt the rise: Beat Diabetes”, the international community celebrated the day with sensitisation and enlightenment sessions, including public lectures, road shows and media discussions, to hammer home key ideas that could help tone down the spread of the disease, which the World Health Organisation (WHO) says may become the 7th leading killer of humans by the year 2030.
Diabetes is a chronic, progressive non-communicable disease (NCD) characterised by elevated levels of blood glucose (blood sugar), and occurs either when the pancreas does not produce enough of the insulin hormone, which regulates blood sugar, or when the body cannot effectively use the insulin it produces. The complications of diabetes can lead to heart attack, stroke, blindness, impotence, kidney failure and lower limb amputation.
According to WHO, “in 2014, the number of people living with diabetes almost quadrupled to 422 million adults or 8.5% of the population, compared with 108 million or 4.7% in 1980, with most living in developing countries. Diabetes caused 1.5 million deaths in 2012.”
WHO highlighted the need to step up prevention and treatment of the disease, listing needed measures to include expanding health-promoting environments to reduce diabetes risk factors, like physical inactivity and unhealthy diets, and strengthening national capacities to help people with diabetes receive the treatment and care they need to manage their conditions.
It was also stated that many cases of diabetes can be prevented and that measures exist to detect and manage the condition and improve the odds so that people with diabetes live long and healthy lives.” It added that change in the spread greatly depends on governments doing more, including implementing global commitments to address diabetes and other NCDs.
Here in Nigeria, the Diabetic Association of Nigeria (DAN), South-South zone confirmed that more than one million people were living with diabetes in Rivers State, with huge unspecified death toll in the last decade, and added that the number of people living with diabetes in the State was on the increase.
Interestingly, Rivers State Government says it is ready to work with all stakeholders in the health sector to reduce the burden of diabetes and its complications through various public enlightenment and intervention programmes. It further called on the people to make concerted effort to prevent and treat diabetes to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.
The Tide is worried that even as diabetes is becoming so prevalent and deadly, a lot of people know very little about the medical condition. Often, it is the fear of diabetes rather than its causes, prevention and management that is thrown up.
Combined with a culture that does not have space for periodic health checks, diabetes is easily mistaken for other medical conditions until it becomes too late for some persons. In fact, very few people know that diabetes can also be hereditary, a point that should ordinarily be a guide for some persons.
Incidentally, there is now the emergence of type II diabetes that affects children. As in other health related situations, ignorance of the cause(s) can only spread the wings of the disease and multiply the casualty rate.
That is why we expect the Rivers State Government to, in addition to preparing the personnel and facilities of the health sector to deal with this rising evil, embark on extensive enlightenment programme. The Ministry of Health must collaborate with the Ministry of Information to come up with ingenuous ways of driving the message on diabetes home.
Because of the harsh realities of the economy, a good number of the people may not be able to pay for the diabetes test and the drugs. Government may need to do something in this direction with a view to removing the fangs from the jaws of diabetes.
On the whole, the rise in diabetes simply calls on men to take serious their health through a review of their lifestyle, what they consume and simple exercise. People must now pay attention, more than ever before, on health information and age-long admonitions from the major religions on health.
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