Defeat Diabetes Now

It is estimated that over 100 million Indians will suffer from diabetes by 2030. Alarming as it may sound, experts emphasize that simple lifestyle measures can prevent diabetes. Here's the lowdown.

offline
It is estimated that over 100 million Indians will suffer from diabetes by 2030. Alarming as it may sound, experts emphasize that simple lifestyle measures can prevent diabetes. Here's the lowdown.

A SMALL BOIL ON HIS FOREARM 12 YEARS AGO transformed L. Srinivasa Gopal's life. The Chennai-based IT professional was advised a minor surgery, and pre-surgery tests revealed that he had high blood sugar. He was 37, overweight, had poor eating habits and a stressful job involving night shifts. Even with diabetic parents at home, he didn't think he was at risk.

He is not alone. According to latest estimates, a staggering 69 million Indians have diabetes and another 80 million prediabetes. What's more, awareness about the condition is dismal. According to the recent ICMR India Diabetes Study, about 58 per cent of the urban respondents were aware of the condition and about 56 per cent of the general population knew it was preventable.

Why is diabetes becoming an epidemic?

Indians are genetically more susceptible. We have the 'thrifty gene'-primed to store energy as abdominal fat. It helped cope with food shortage in the distant past, but now when food is plentiful, it increases diabetes risk. But experts agree that genes alone cannot explain why the numbers have shot up dramatically in the past 40 years. They hold our lifestyle-the tendency to remain sedentary and overeat, along with stress, which throws our hormones out of whack-and environment responsible.

It is the interplay of genes, lifestyle and environment that determine our diabetes risk. Experts say that healthy choices can outsmart our genes, and armed with information and taking charge of our health can help protect us from the imminent diabetes tsunami.

What is diabetes?

Insulin is a hormone that regulates our blood sugar levels. Diabetes is a chronic condition in which the body cannot make or use insulin properly. Over time, uncontrolled diabetes can turn lethal by causing serious damage to blood vessels (cardiovascular disease, stroke, retinopathy), nerves (neuropathy or numbness) and organs (kidney disease).

Srinivasa was luc...

Read more!