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    Diabetes Control Has Gotten Much Better

    More than ever, Americans with diabetes are meeting three goals vital for control of their disease, a new study finds. And that could lower their risk for diabetes-related complications such as heart disease, stroke, kidney disease, blindness and amputations.

    According to the study results, the number of Americans with diabetes who now meet or exceed goals for the three "ABCs" ? which stand for A1C, blood pressure and cholesterol ?  increased from about 2 percent in 1988 to nearly 19 percent in 2010. A1C is a measure of blood glucose, or sugar, over two to three months.

    Experts recommend that people with diabetes aim for an A1C of less than 7 percent; a blood pressure reading under 130/80 mmHg; and an LDL cholesterol reading of less than 100 mg/dL. (LDL is considered the "bad" cholesterol.)

    Researchers from the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention analyzed data gathered by the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys from 1988 to 1994 and from 1999 to 2010. NHANES is a federal program of studies that regularly assesses the health and nutritional status of Americans.

    The investigators found that 53 percent of Americans met A1C goals from 2007 to 2010, compared with 43 percent from 1988 to 1994. Fifty one percent of people with diabetes met blood pressure goals, up from 33 percent. And 56 percent met cholesterol goals, up from 10 percent.

    The researchers attributed the improvement in LDL cholesterol to a dramatic increase in statin use. Some 51.4 percent of adults with diabetes take the cholesterol-lowering drugs, compared with 4.2 percent from 1988 to 1994, according to the study.

    Several factors may be driving the improvement in diabetes control,  according to the researchers. Among them: new and improved medications; rising concerns about the obesity and diabetes epidemics in the U.S.; and more attention being placed on healthy behaviors.

    Despite the heartening news, not everyone who has diabetes is doing a good job of controlling it. Nearly half of Americans with diabetes did not meet each ABC goal, the researchers wrote.

    People 75 or older were more likely to have controlled their A1C than were adults ages 20 to 49. And non-Hispanic whites and non-Hispanic blacks were more likely than Mexican Americans to have an A1C of less than 7 percent.

    Blood pressure goals were more likely to be reached by younger people than by older people; by non-Hispanic whites than by non-Hispanic blacks; and by people who had graduated from college than by people who had graduated only from high school.

    Finally, older people were more successful at lowering LDL cholesterol than younger people. So were non-Hispanic whites, people who had at least a high school diploma, and men.

    "Our data also show that there is much room for improvement," the researchers wrote. "As the U.S. population ages and diabetes prevalence increases, it becomes increasingly urgent to find ways to overcome barriers to good diabetes management and deliver affordable, quality care so those with diabetes can live a longer and healthier life without serious diabetes complications."

    Pass it on: More Americans are controlling their diabetes, but there's room for improvement.

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    Copyright 2013 MyHealthNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    17 comments

    • Lamb  •  2 days 3 hrs ago
      Here is how I removed the need for medications for my type 2. I changed my diet. All the carbs I used to eat are much rarer now. I enjoy some ice cream here and there but the lighter stuff and not very often. Cookies, cakes, brownies are also rare. I also removed all soda and sweetened fruit drinks; look for high fructose corn syrup Of course walking on a regular basis...

      I recently moved and tossed all diabetes meds and if I were to go home and do a finger poke it would read normal.
    • Ethan T  •  2 days 2 hrs ago
      I've had type 1 for 10 years, A1C's in the low to mid 5's most of the time. I am physically active, as I was before I contracted the disease. Ironically enough, I now carry around about 10 more pounds than before I contracted. I also eat more junk carbs than ever before. That's because I cannot get through a 1 hour workout at the gym without needing serious carbs, be it oreo cookies or power gels. I use the plain old cookies as a source of carbs much more than I use power gels or sugar pills because the cost is so much lower. All this is a result of using insulin. It does it's job keeping the blood sugar down, but no amount of intelligence and education on my part can match the function of a healthy pancreas, so there is still plenty of volatility in my blood sugar. About 1/2 of that's on the low side. Bottom line: the improvements are a good thing, but still not as good as preventing and/or curing diabetes.
    • mn boy  •  2 days 7 hrs ago
      Diet and exercise. I had an A1C of 8.1%, triglyserides of 350 and cholesterol of 204.
      I was taking Medformin twice a day 500mg. I work out at least once a day for an hour and sometimes twice. I was 305 lbs, in 3 months I was down to 247. My A1C is now at 5.3%, tris are down to 75 and Chol is at 124. Eat more veggies, smaller portions of all foods, Berries of any kind and apples, cut back on the booze. And go do something. The drug companies wont make anything if you get your act together. I have quit taking the Medformin. And I will lose another 40-50lbs. It can be done but it doesnt happen unless you and only you change your lifestyle. Or you can do nothing about it and complain about the drug company and doctors. They didnt make you who you are, you did.
    • Joerep39  •  2 days 10 hrs ago
      It is really pretty pitiful that there have not been more advances in diabetes control. Since insulin was invented in 1922, there has not been much since. Most of the increased control has come from better education of patients. Transplantation BEFORE the body experiences complications needs to be the norm. This coming from a very successful kidney/pancreas transplant survivor.
      • Ernie 2 days 9 hrs ago
        Advances have been very forthcoming ..... Diabetes requires effort by the victim .... at this time there are no magic pills ... I know ... why don't you come up with the magic pill? Oh right .... your mother is calling you in for your dinner .... jackass
    • RONALD  •  2 days 10 hrs ago
      Corporations make much to much money on Diabetes meds and supplies to change anything
    • LarryK  •  2 days 7 hrs ago
      Both are liver problems.
    • Larry Hicks  •  2 days 9 hrs ago
      The only way to control diabetes is to radically change the diet of refined carbs, soda pop, sugar, rancid vegetable oils, and the rest of the "Standard American Diet" that's been shoved down our throats since after WWII. Prior to that, diabetes was rare, heart disease was rare, cancers were few and well-known AND RARE. People were living into ripe old age on whole unpasteurized milk (fewer problems with raw milk than with pasteurized, B.T.W.), whole-fat dairy, lots of eggs, lots of meat, etc. As soon as we got "low-calorie" and "low-fat" garbage pushed at us we started getting fat and sick. And when you read the chemical lists on the simplest of processed "foods" and consider that all corn products in the U.S., with the SOLE exception of blue corn tortilla chips have been "genetically modified" to secrete its own pesticide inside the kernels (among the dozens and dozens of GMO "foods") then it's no surprise we're getting fat and sick. Look up "The Oiling of America" on YouTube and it'll give you chills to realize just what you've been eating without knowing.
    • Ken  •  1 day 0 hrs ago
      I have diabetes but I didn't find out until I started having symptoms from it. Now I can barley walk I am in so much pain. I take a ton of medications. Including 200 units of lantis and 120 units of novolog a day total. And now I found out I have liver disease because since I started taking the insulin I went from 210 to 270lbs and it is still going up. And I cant lose the weight. I barley eat anything at all anymore because everything upsets my stomach gastroparisis. And I cannot exercise because It hurts too dam much. And my insurance will not pay for Physical therapy.
      I guess I would be in better shape if I had a decent Doctor that actually checked for diabetes in the first place when I asked her about it before all of the complications.
      Now I have 3 new Doctors and they are doing everything the insurance will let them do to help.
    • LArry  •  2 days 9 hrs ago
      I am a type 2 and love to eat and Wendy's and McDonalds. I hate veggies
    • Brent  •  2 days 8 hrs ago
      My 10 yr A1C average is 6.25. However, I am 40 lbs overweight because I compensate over eating with Insulin. In other words, I test a lot so I have to add insulin to keep my sugars normal. I admit, I do not follow a strict diet but I do stay away from high sugar and high carbs but that's about it.
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