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Press Release
For Immediate Release: October 27, 2000
Contact: CDC Media Relations (404) 639-3286
Facts About Diabetes
- Nearly 16 million Americans suffer from diabetes; one third do not know they have it. Diabetes is the seventh leading cause of death in the U.S.
- The prevalence of diabetes-including gestational diabetes--among adults rose 33 percent between1990 and 1998. The increased rates of diabetes correlate with increased rates of obesity during the same period.
- During the last decade, the prevalence of diabetes increased among men and women of all ages and ethnic groups and in nearly all states. Among individuals aged 30-39, the prevalence of diabetes increased 76 percent.
- Diabetes is the leading cause of new cases of blindness in adults aged 20-74.
- Approximately 65 percent of people with diabetes have high blood pressure.
- People with diabetes have up to 4 times the rate of heart disease as people without diabetes.
- Preventive care services can minimize diabetes-related complications such as blindness, cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure, and amputations.
- Preventive care is lowest among people living in the South, people with less than a high school education, and people without health insurance.
- Diabetes is the leading cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD, i.e., chronic kidney failure). Among Native Americans, diabetes accounts for 60 percent of the new ESRD cases each year.
- Since 1990, incidence of end-stage renal disease attributable to diabetes has increased by 24 percent among Native Americans with diabetes.
- Type 2 diabetes (formerly called adult onset) is increasing rapidly among children and adolescents, particularly in minority populations, and may account for up to 45 percent of new cases of childhood diabetes.
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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
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