THE number of people diagnosed with diabetes in northern, eastern and western Devon has reached 51,087, according to new analysis released by Diabetes UK.
The new figures show that the number of people who have been diagnosed with Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes in the area has increased by 3,182 since last year, when 47,905 were recorded as living with the condition.
The area served by the Northern, Eastern and Western Devon Clinical Commissioning Group has more people with diabetes than any other clinical commissioning area in the south west.
In Northern, Eastern and Western Devon, 6.77 per cent of the population now have diabetes, higher than the national average of 6.6 per cent. In the UK overall, the number of people diagnosed with diabetes has more than doubled in the last 20 years.
The new figures show that there are now almost 3.7 million people diagnosed with Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes in the UK, an increase of 1.9 million since 1998.
The data also show that the number of people diagnosed with Type 1 or Type 2 diabetes has increased by almost 100,000 since last year – from 3,590,501 to 3,689,509.
Almost nine in ten people diagnosed with diabetes have Type 2, and it is estimated that there are nearly a million people currently living with the condition who don’t know they have it. Counting this undiagnosed population, the total number of people living with diabetes reaches 4.6-million.
A further 12.3-million people are estimated to be at increased risk of Type 2 diabetes in the UK and obesity is the leading cause in the majority of preventable cases.
Three in five women (59 per cent) and two in three men (68 per cent) are overweight or obese. More than one in five children (22 per cent) are overweight or obese in their first year of primary school in England.
This increases to more than one in three (34 per cent) by the time they leave primary school.
With so many at risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, Diabetes UK is calling on the Government to take further action to tackle childhood obesity, by introducing stricter restrictions both on junk food advertising to children, and supermarket price promotions for unhealthy foods.
The charity also underlines the need for people at high risk of Type 2 diabetes to be identified and referred to the NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme, which supports people to make changes that could prevent the onset of the condition.
To find out more go to www.diabetes.org.uk/diabetes-statistics



.jpeg?width=209&height=140&crop=209:145,smart&quality=75)


Comments
This article has no comments yet. Be the first to leave a comment.