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What is bacterial meningitis and how do you protect yourself? – KHOU.com

Posted: January 5, 2020 at 4:25 am

HOUSTON The death of a 5-year-old boy is being investigated as a possible bacterial meningitis case.

The Montgomery County Public Health District said the case was reported to them on New Years Eve.

Myles Cheathams family told KHOU 11 the boy fell ill on Dec. 28 and died two days later at Texas Childrens Hospital in The Woodlands. MCPHD officials said Myles family was given preventative treatment and there is no risk to the general public.

Dr. Hana El Sahly, associate professor of molecular biology, microbiology and infectious diseases at Baylor College of Medicine, said not everyone who comes in contact with the bacteria that causes meningitis will get sick.

For most people the acquisition goes unnoticed," Dr. El Sahly said.

That is why its so important to be aware of your body. Dr. El Sahly said bacteria that can cause infections like meningitis are everywhere and are very serious.

People with weaker immune systems are more likely to develop meningitis.

Its usually coming in contact with someone who has the bacteria in their upper respiratory tract and transmission to another person, she said.

Dr. El Sahly said the disease causes inflammation of the lining of the brain. She said getting sick can happen really quickly.

Symptoms to be on the lookout for include fever, headaches, stiffness of the neck, nausea and vomiting.

Neurologic findings like fever and all of a sudden an inability to move or having particular neurologic dysfunction," Dr. El Sahly said.

She urges people to keep track how theyre feeling especially when something seems out of the ordinary.

Fever on its own that resolves or responds to certain medications should not be alarming, Dr. El Sahly said.

She added hygiene is crucial and so is keeping up with vaccines because they can help lower the risk of developing infectious diseases like meningitis.

RELATED: Vaccine group announces creation of Ebola vaccine stockpile

RELATED: Michigan teen on ventilator after mosquito bite, mom says

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Medicaid expansion is a gift – Post Register

Posted: January 5, 2020 at 4:25 am

The expansion of health coverage is certainly something to celebrate this holiday season. As 49,000 Idahoans and counting will have health coverage due to Medicaid expansion, we can all be grateful for the peace of mind, economic security and improved health that these families will enjoy. And we must continue to work together to help Idahoans get and keep the health coverage they need. As a physician practicing in rural Idaho, Im looking forward to more members of our community being able to receive preventative care and address chronic conditions that have gone untreated for far too long.

Medicaid makes it possible for low-income Idahoans to be healthy making sure they can work and take care of their families. It allows them to see a doctor when they are sick, get check-ups, buy medications and go to the hospital without fear of choosing between their health and groceries or paying their rent/mortgage. Medicaid offers financial protection for families so they dont have to go bankrupt when they face an unexpected illness or need to go to the hospital.

Medicaid expansion was achieved in Idaho through a bipartisan effort that included the support of former Gov. Butch Otter and several Republican lawmakers with deep knowledge and experience with Idahos health system. While a small group of Idaho legislators want to play Grinch and spread fear about people being kicked off private health coverage, the truth is that these Idahoans will still have health coverage without the burden of extra out-of-pocket costs that make their private plans difficult to afford.

Medicaid is more cost-effective and offers better health coverage for the vast majority of Idahoans who will qualify for Medicaid expansion. Efforts to keep some Idahoans who are newly eligible for Medicaid expansion on the state exchange would have cost taxpayers more money and added to the federal deficit, which is why the Trump administration rejected Idaho lawmakers request to do so.

Health care providers across Idaho, from hospitals, to physicians, to community clinics, have embraced Medicaid expansion and are working hard to enroll Idahoans and care for these individuals. As a physician, I know that Im looking forward to treating patients earlier before they have costly, more serious health conditions.

Medicaid expansion is a gift for Idaho. Idahoans who are struggling to make ends meet will now have access to health coverage and can receive preventative care to keep them healthy, or finally treat chronic conditions that have damaged their quality of life and ability to work. By 2022, Medicaid expansion will result in savings or offsets to the state totaling over $31 million, with a net savings of $3.5 million annually. Starting on Jan. 1, Idahoans across the state will have health coverage, reducing uncompensated care costs for rural hospitals, helping fund more Idaho physicians, saving local communities money and creating over $16 million in new economic activity. Its time to put politics aside and come together to fully support Medicaid expansion in Idaho.

Dr. Keith Davis is a family medicine doctor in Shoshone, Idaho and is affiliated with two hospitals in the Magic Valley. He is the owner, CEO and medical director of Shoshone Family Medical Center, where he has practiced for over 30 years. He received his medical degree from George Washington University School of Medicine.

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Will the rhetoric of Boris Johnson’s New Year’s Project Positive message match the reality? – inews

Posted: January 5, 2020 at 4:25 am

NewsPoliticsIt may take more than positive thinking and a change in calendars to improve the economy, personal finances, health and sense of unity

Wednesday, 1st January 2020, 11:46 am

Boris Johnsons New Year message was brimming with optimism as he said the country could now turn the page on division, rancour and uncertainty which has dominated public life and held us back for far too long.

From his Health Secretary, Matt Hancock, there was a similar message to start the New Year. In an article for conservativehome.com, Mr Hancock said the coming decade holds great promise in the treatment of illness, through technology and social prescribing.

The i politics newsletter cut through the noise

But given Brexit will happen at the end of this month, heralding an uncertain period for the economy and society, can the upbeat messages really match the reality of what lies ahead?

People are more optimistic than a year ago

A YouGov poll for The Times seems to suggest that the public are feeling generally more optimistic about their financial prospects in the coming year than they were last year - although a majority still feel they could worsen.

It is all relative: 20 per cent expect an improvement in prospects, up from 13 per cent a year ago, while 27 per cent are gloomy about their own finances, a figure which has, nevertheless, fallen from 40 per cent last year.

The survey found 24 per cent believed the economy was in good shape, compared with 18 per cent a year earlier while 34 per cent believed it was doing badly, down from 41 per cent.

Yet it is going to take more than just positive thinking and a change in calendars to improve the nation's economy, personal finances, health and sense of unity.

When Britain leaves the European Union on 31 January, there will still be uncertainty over the countrys future trading arrangements with both the EU and the rest of the world.

Warnings of recession

Post-Brexit Britain could mean an improvement for the nations finances, or it could spell trouble - particularly because there have been warnings of recession for other major economies at the start of this decade.

Nobody really knows how the UK economy will fare after Brexit, as no major country has left the EU before.

On health, Mr Hancock admitted in his article that great challenges as well as incredible promise lies ahead. He is right to say that harnessing new technology in the NHS will transform lives - including genome sequencing, which will be able to identify future health conditions at birth, focusing on preventative medicine which could in turn save the NHS billions.

The Health Secretary also placed great focus on new research in tackling dementia, one of the underlying drivers in the social care crisis that is only deepening as the population gradually ages.

Yet, despite the optimistic messages on health and social care, the fact remains that the NHS, according to experts, needs more money than has been pledged even in this supposed post-austerity era.

It is also the case that a long-term plan for tackling social care - not just focusing on future treatment for dementia or short-term funding boosts - has not been published by the government.

And given the period of division over Brexit and austerity that the country has just been through in the past decade, it is all too easy for the Prime Minister to say that a page can be turned, as if the change of a date can bring an end to societys troubles and political argument.

Mr Johnson may have overcome some disunity in Parliament with his 80-seat majority, but Scottish independence is back on the agenda after the SNPs landslide at the election, and the rest of the country may feel it needs to see more evidence that Project Positive can translate into reality.

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Simple Type-2 Diabetes Treatment With Low Calorie Diet is So Effective, It Reverses the Disease in Studies – Good News Network

Posted: January 5, 2020 at 4:20 am

A breakthrough treatment plan for type-2 diabetes has the British National Health Service (NHS) bustling as they position themselves to adopt a new standard of treatment.

The course of treatment consists of a liquid diet of 800 calories to be taken as a soup or shake daily for a set amount of months depending on the time since the patient developed type-2 diabetes.

The breakthrough research arose out of Newcastle University which seems to have stuck a pin in many of our assumptions about type-2 diabetesas well as proven almost beyond a shadow of a doubt that type-2 diabetes is actually reversible, especially in newer patients.

The treatment is basically a prescription for a reduction in calorie intakea potential intervention that has shown incredible results for many different conditions.

RELATED: Bionic Pancreas for Type 1 Diabetes Gets Breakthrough Designation From FDA

The Diabetes Remission Clinical Trial, (DiRECT) recently published these findings as a means of demonstrating the massive potential of DiRECT as a general treatment plan.

One-third of all people taking part in the trial were free of diabetes at 2 years. Around three quarters of everyone who was in remission at 1 year stayed in remission at 2 years. Furthermore, the group who embarked on rapid weight loss had fewer serious medical problems in the second year of DiRECT.

Official statistics from the NHS place the number of Brits with type-2 diabetes at 4 million, and rising. Meanwhile, in the United States, the CDC reports that 1 in 10 Americansroughly 30 million peoplehave diabetes, 90% of which is type-2. Many people also go undiagnosed for years.

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Recent studies carried out by Professors Mike Lean and Roy Taylor of Newcastle University showed that type-2 diabetes is triggered by fat spills. These fat spills, which came from the liver, traveled to the nearby pancreas where it wreaked havoc in the efficiency of the organ to produce insulin.

Insulin is needed to command your cells to absorb excess carbohydrates circulating in your body after a carb or sugar-dense meal.

The liver fat, astonishingly high in type 2 diabetes, falls to normal, explains Dr. Taylor in an interview with Medscape. The pancreas fat comes down gradually, gradually, and the pancreas recovers gradually, gradually. And thats amazing because we always thought that the pancreas had to go downhill inevitably in type 2 diabetes.

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In April 2020, the NHS will begin trials with a liquid diet as per the DiRECT research with 5,000 participants helping to test whether the program can benefit the public. If the trials are successful, the breakthrough diet will become the new standard of care in a remarkably rapid frame of time for the chronic ailment thats been causing amputations, blindness, and heart complications for decades.

The widely-taken drug Metformin has been the standard of care for the treatment of diabetes in France since 1957 and in Canada since 1972. Illustrative of how long it can take to approve a treatment in the U.S., Metformin didnt receive approval by the FDA until 1994, even though 5.8 million Americans were diagnosed with diabetes in 1980.

Like all professional men and women of science, Taylor feels more research is needed before the liquid diet intervention is widely prescribed.

MORE: FDA Approves the First New Cystic Fibrosis Treatment in Decades

We need to follow up this group, said Taylor. We follow them up for a total of 2 years in the proper randomized controlled trial.

We have funding to follow up the intervention group participants for a total of 3 years. And weve applied for further funding because we need to see what happens to these people as time goes on.

But, he admits it is heart-warming hearing all the stories about remissions. Its all about the individual and all about helping people back to this state of relative health and happiness. And that does seem to be happening in quite large numbers of people who are able to do it.

Cure Your Friends Of Negativity By Sharing The Good News To Social Media (Photo by PracticalCures.com, CC license)

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Study reveals what causes type 2 diabetes and how to reverse it – Medical News Today

Posted: January 5, 2020 at 4:20 am

As the incidence of diabetes continues to increase globally, the fight against this chronic condition continues. New research explains not only what triggers type 2 diabetes but also how to reverse the condition. The findings also shed light on what leads to remission after reversal for some people.

Between 1980 and 2014, the number of people living with diabetes across the world increased from about 108 million to 422 million.

As many as 90% of these individuals have type 2 diabetes.

Pharmacological interventions have done little to stop what some have referred to as the diabetes pandemic.

Lifestyle interventions, however, may succeed where other approaches have failed.

A couple of years ago, Medical News Todayreported on the first results of a clinical trial, which showed that intensive weight loss programs could help people with type 2 diabetes achieve remission without taking any medication.

The trail was called the Diabetes Remission Clinical Trial (DiRECT), and one of its co-leaders was Prof. Roy Taylor from Newcastle University in the United Kingdom.

But how does this remission occur, and can it last in the long term? Why do some people achieve lasting remission while for others, the condition returns?

Prof. Taylor set out with his team to answer these questions, using data from the DiRECT trial and applying cutting-edge imaging and blood monitoring techniques.

The researchers published their findings in the journal Cell Metabolism.

The study aimed to test and confirm the so-called twin cycle hypothesis, which Prof. Taylor and team put forth more than a decade ago.

The theory proposed that type 2 diabetes results from the accumulation of fat in the liver, which induces insulin resistance and increases blood sugar production.

These effects, in turn, increase plasma insulin levels, precipitating "a self-reinforcing cycle" in which insulin stimulates fat production.

These increased levels of liver fat cause the lipids to overspill into several tissues, including the pancreas.

Beta-cells, which are responsible for creating insulin, are located in the pancreas. "Long-term exposure to saturated fatty acids is harmful to [beta]-cells," write the authors.

In the present study, the authors investigated the predictions of the twin cycle hypothesis 2 years into the DiRECT trial.

The researchers wanted to "describe the pathophysiologic processes underlying the recurrence of type 2 diabetes in the group that initially achieved remission but then relapsed back to diabetes."

To this end, the researchers quantified intra-organ and abdominal fat using cutting-edge MRI scans at 12 and 24 months. They looked at pancreatic and liver fat, specifically.

The analysis included measurements of glucose, HbA1c, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, and triglycerides. The team also analyzed fatty acids, insulin secretion, and beta-cell function.

The study revealed that the majority of the trial participants maintained remission over the 2 years but that this was only possible if liver triglycerides and fat in the pancreas remained low.

Specifically, almost 9 out of 10 participants who managed to lose 15 kilograms or more in the DiRECT trial reversed their condition.

After 2 years, more than one-third of these individuals had been free of diabetes and the need for diabetes medication for at least 24 months.

A small group, however, experienced relapse, which was associated with a return to high liver triglycerides and high intrapancreatic fat levels.

Prof. Taylor explains: "We saw that when a person accumulates too much fat, which should be stored under the skin, then it has to go elsewhere in the body. The amount that can be stored under the skin varies from person to person, indicating a 'personal fat threshold' above which fat can cause mischief."

"When fat cannot be safely stored under the skin, it is then stored inside the liver and overspills to the rest of the body, including the pancreas. This 'clogs up' the pancreas, switching off the genes [that] direct how insulin should effectively be produced, and this causes type 2 diabetes."

Prof. Roy Taylor

"This means we can now see type 2 diabetes as a simple condition where the individual has accumulated more fat than they can cope with," continues the author, stressing the hopeful implications of this finding.

"Importantly, this means that through diet and persistence, patients are able to lose the fat and potentially reverse their diabetes. The sooner this is done after diagnosis, the more likely it is that remission can be achieved."

"For the first time," conclude Prof. Taylor and team in their paper, "we are able to report the underlying physiologic changes during a full cycle of disease reversal and re-emergence."

In the U.K., the National Health Service (NHS) will roll out a program that will test the weight loss therapy in thousands of people living with type 2 diabetes.

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Manage your diabetes in the cold winter months – TheHealthSite

Posted: January 5, 2020 at 4:20 am

The cold winter months are not kind to diabetic patients. If you are diabetic, you need to take extra care and precaution during the cold season. This is a difficult time to be disciplined about diet and exercise. Besides, winter depression may make things worse. You may also be at more risk of catching the flu and common cold. Pneumonia is a real threat. Hence, it is better to be safe and take the correct precautionary measures. Let us take a look to see what you can do to protect yourself if you are diabetic.

In winter, you often feel lazy to exercise regularly. But this can have a bad impact on your blood sugar levels. So make sure that you exercise regularly. You dont have to go to the gym for your exercise session. You can easily exercise in the comforts of your home. Put on some music to liven things up. This will boost your health and keep blood sugar levels in check too.

You need to take extra care of your feet in the cold weather. Because of diabetic neuropathy, you may not be able to feel sensations on your feet. Cracked heels and dry skin is common during these months. So be sure to wash and mositurise your feet regularly. Always wear warm socks to avoid injury and infections.

Avoid stress and depression. This can aggravate your condition. Depression and lack of sunlight can take its toll on you in winter. Try meeting more people and keeping your busy. It will definitely help you.

This is the time to be lazy. You may not want to get out from under your blanket. You also tend to eat more and junk food is especially tempting now. This can be disastrous for your waistline and blood sugar levels. If you have diabetes, you need to be all the more careful. You cannot afford to gain weight. If you want to take care of yourself, you must ensure that you keep your weight in check.

Published : January 4, 2020 7:12 pm

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High Cost of Insulin Has Life-or-Death Implications for Diabetic Patients – Newswise

Posted: January 5, 2020 at 4:20 am

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Newswise ROCHESTER, Minn. The most commonly used forms of insulin cost 10 times more in the U.S. than in any other developed country,according to a commentaryinMayo Clinic Proceedings. This prohibitive cost is causing some U.S. patients with Type 1 diabetes to ration the amount of insulin they use, with life-threatening implications.

The commentary byS. Vincent Rajkumar, M.D., a Mayo Clinic physician, describes the cost of insulin as an urgent public health issue. "There are 30 million patients with diabetes in the United States, and about 25%, or 7.4 million Americans, need insulin. For the 1.3 million patients with Type 1 diabetes, insulin is as vital as air and water. Some patients are rationing insulin or switching to cheaper forms without proper supervision. We cannot wait to act."

The commentary appears in the January issue of Mayo Clinic Proceedings, which focuses on diabetes and the discovery of insulin in 1921. The use of insulin to treat diabetes has transformed the lives of millions of people, but the sharp cost increase in recent years has threatened patient care.

Insulin is a naturally occurring hormone that helps regulate blood sugar levels.Insulin therapyis vital for people withType 1 diabetesand for many patients withType 2 diabetes. Type 1 diabetes is a chronic condition where the pancreas produces little or no insulin. With Type 2 diabetes, the body resists the effects of insulin or doesn't produce enough to maintain normal glucose levels. Long-term complications can be debilitating and life-threatening.

"There have been many recent reports of deaths in patients with Type 1 diabetes because of the lack of affordable insulin," Dr. Rajkumar says. "The high prevalence of diabetes, the chronic lifelong nature of the disease, and the fact that patients with Type 1 diabetes will die without access to insulin make this an urgent problem that must be solved expeditiously."

"The No. 1 reason for the high cost of insulin is the presence of a vulnerable population that needs insulin to survive," he says. "This population is willing to pay almost anything to have access to a lifesaving drug, and manufacturers know it."

Dr. Rajkumar, the Edward W. and Betty Knight Scripps Professor of Medicine at Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science, proposes several solutions that would help make insulin and other prescription drugs more affordable. They include:

"We cannot afford to lose a single additional life because of the high cost of insulin," says Dr. Rajkumar. "The price of insulin is a stark and troubling example of what's happening with other prescription drugs, and it highlights a systemic problem with how drugs are priced, compared with just about every other commodity."

###

About Mayo Clinic ProceedingsMayo Clinic Proceedingsis a monthly peer-reviewed journal that publishes original articles and reviews dealing with clinical and laboratory medicine, clinical research, basic science research, and clinical epidemiology. Mayo Clinic Proceedings is sponsored by the Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research as part of its commitment to physician education. It publishes submissions from authors worldwide. The journal has been published for more than 90 years and has a circulation of 127,000.

About Mayo ClinicMayo Clinicis a nonprofit organization committed to innovation in clinical practice, education and research, and providing compassion, expertise and answers to everyone who needs healing.Visit the Mayo Clinic News Networkfor additional Mayo Clinic news andAn Inside Look at Mayo Clinicfor more information about Mayo.

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Make Diabetes Prevention and Management a Priority in the New Year – TAPinto.net

Posted: January 5, 2020 at 4:20 am

FANWOOD/SCOTCH PLAINS, NJ -- In 2020, its time to put your health first. If you are at risk for Type 2 diabetes, or have been diagnosed with diabetes, the Fanwood-Scotch Plains YMCA (FSPY) is offering two programs beginning in January to help you on your path to health and wellness.

FSPY recently received Full Recognition from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for its YMCAs Diabetes Prevention Program. The program is designed for those with pre-diabetes, a condition in which a persons blood glucose is elevated, but not high enough for a diabetes diagnosis. According to the CDC, 86 million adults have pre-diabetes and 9 out of 10 individuals with pre-diabetes dont know they have it. Without weight loss and moderate physical activity, 15 to 30 percent of people with pre-diabetes will develop type 2 diabetes within five years.

The year-long YMCAs Diabetes Prevention Program starts with 16 weekly sessions led by a trained lifestyle coach. This gradually eases to two sessions per month and then one session per month. The program helps adults lose weight through healthier eating and increased physical activity, potentially preventing or delaying the onset of type 2 diabetes. A group-based lifestyle intervention, it has been shown to reduce the number of new cases of diabetes by 58 percent overall and by 71 percent in adults over 60.

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To receive Full Recognition as part of the CDCs National Diabetes Prevention Program, FSPYs program had to effectively deliver a quality, evidence-based program that met all the standards for CDC recognition, including program participants having an average weight loss of 5 percent over one year; meeting attendance parameters, and participants keeping food/activity records.

We are excited to have received CDC Full Recognition for our YMCAs Diabetes Prevention Program and are looking forward to helping even more people in our community achieve their goals, said Sheri Cognetti, Senior Program Director at the Fanwood-Scotch Plains YMCA. Our program has been shown to reduce peoples chances of developing diabetes and to improve their overall health and wellness. Through group support and our trained facilitators, we offer a comprehensive approach to tackling the diabetes epidemic.

In addition, FSPY offers the Diabetes Self-Management Program (DSMP) for those who have already been diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes. This program helps them manage the disease through lifestyle changes, including healthy eating, exercise, developing goals and problem solving, as well as through group support. The program consists of several workshops totaling 16 hours that help participants understand diabetes and its risks. DSMP teaches participants how to live healthier in a fun, positive environment. It does not replace other programs or treatment, and participants are referred to their physicians for all medical questions.

Individuals can assess their risk for pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes by taking a simple test at YMCA.net/diabetes. Through this assessment, visitors also can learn how lifestyle choices and family history help determine the ultimate risk for developing the disease. Several factors that could put a person at risk for type 2 diabetes include race, age, weight and activity level. If a person is at risk, a diabetes screening conducted by a physician can confirm a diabetes or pre-diabetes diagnosis.

For more information about how to qualify for the YMCAs Diabetes Prevention Program or the Diabetes Self-Management Program, contact Donna Peart at dpeart@fspymca.org or 908-889-8880. Both programs will begin in mid-to-late January with days/times to be determined by enrollment. The programs are open to the community; you do not have to be an FSPY member to participate.

The Fanwood-Scotch Plains YMCA is dedicated to improving the quality of life of the individuals, families and communities it serves through programs and services that build wholeness of spirit, mind and body. The YMCA is a not-for-profit organization founded on Christian principles, serving people of all ages, races, faith, cultures and socio-economic conditions. For information on membership or programs, or to request a schedule of classes, please call the Fanwood-Scotch Plains YMCA at (908) 889-8880 or visithttps://fspymca.org.Financial assistance is available for those who qualify.

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Battle Ground HealthCare offers diabetes prevention program with WSUV – clarkcountytoday.com

Posted: January 5, 2020 at 4:20 am

BATTLE GROUND In an effort to stop the rising number of Type 2 Diabetes patients, the free clinic of Battle Ground HealthCare (BGHC) and WSU Vancouvers extension campus are partnering to offer a free community prevention course.

The changes that happen in peoples lives are significant, said BGHC Executive Director Sue Neal. Its been shown and proven. So what weve been doing, working closely with with WSU extension is how is it that we are actually going to keep people interested and connected and coming back and staying, you know, through the course of a year.

The course, known as the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP), will be offered in both English and Spanish with the English course beginning on Jan. 29 from 12:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. and the Spanish on Jan. 28 from 5:15 p.m. to 6:15 p.m.

The year-long program will feature weekly to monthly workshops and meetings designed to foster healthy habits and create a support structure. Participant objectives will be to lose weight and become more physically active.

Nationally, graduates of the program have seen weight loss between 5 and 30 percent of their body weight and have clinically verified reduced risk of Type 2 Diabetes, according to BGHC.

The whole goal behind this is to keep people from ever developing diabetes, Neal said. Were really looking at working with our community partners to say, Lets all work together, so we have viable classes to be able to pull in the people and then the word gets out about what its like to be in these courses and the success.

Coaches trained in the areas specific to Type 2 patients and those at risk, will work with course participants to build healthy eating plans and go through printed materials that explain ways to increase physical activity, move through social and emotional barriers and develop a life-long plan.

According to BGHC, people at risk for Type 2 Diabetes many times do not experience noticeable symptoms or side effects. Type 2 is often linked to hereditary factors, gestational diabetes, being over 45 years old, being overweight, and being physically inactive. Online, there is a risk assessment quiz recommended by the clinic.

What we saw was the power of that social relational emphasis thats there, Neal said. When people come together as a group and they have things in common, they develop this relationship that is supportive and motivating and keeps them coming back. We are as human beings, we are social creatures and weve gotten away, a bit, from the power of that connection, and thats what we see keeps people going.

The classes will be held for one hour weekly for the first four months. From there, participants will meet bi-weekly for two months, then monthly for the final five months of the program. Registration is required and can be completed by either contacting Battle Ground HealthCare at (360) 687 8941 or Amy Raney at (564) 397 5721.

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Diabetes Prevention Programme to Be Expanded – Medscape

Posted: January 5, 2020 at 4:20 am

An NHS programme to help prevent people developing type 2 diabetes would more than double in size, it was announced.

NHS England said that the 89,604 people who had finished the programme lost a combined weight of 185,051kg, equivalent to the weight of 43 ambulances.

It said the programme would now aim to treat around 200,000 people each year.

Prof Jonathan Valabhji, NHS national clinical director for obesity and diabetes, said in a statement: "Around two-thirds of adults and one-third of children are now overweight or obese, driving higher and higher rates of type 2 diabetes that we are now focusing huge efforts to prevent as part of our NHS Long Term Plan.

"Helping people avoid diabetes is potentially life-saving, so these results are encouraging, but ultimately the NHS cannot win the fight against obesity alone, which is why we are providing people with the tools to help themselves changing lives and freeing up vital NHS resources."

The 9 to 12 month NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme (NHS DPP) offers:

Education on lifestyle choices

Advice on how to reduce weight through healthier eating

Bespoke physical activity programmes

International evidence suggested that behavioural interventions significantly reduce the risk of developing the condition, the NHS said.

Helen Dickens, assistant director of policy and campaigns at Diabetes UK, said: "The number of people who are living with obesity in England has almost doubled in the last 20 years. As obesity accounts for 80 to 85% of your risk of type 2 diabetes, programmes such as these are key to helping people prevent or delay the onset of the condition.

"The NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme, however, is so much more than just a weight loss programme. It has helped thousands of people find out more about their risk of type 2 diabetes as well as take action to reduce it.

"Its important to remember that weight is just one of the risk factors for type 2 diabetes. Others include ethnicity, family history and age."

Dr Jenifer Smith, deputy medical director at Public Health England, said: "Going forward we need to do more to reach out to those who may feel the programme is not for them, including some ethnic minority groups, who we know experience large inequalities in health."

There are currently 3.4 million people with type 2 diabetes in England with around 200,000 new diagnoses each year, according to NHS figures.

Type 2 diabetes accounts for 8.8 billion a year, which is just under 9% of the annual NHS budget.

Projections for 2035 suggested that almost 39,000 people with diabetes could experience a heart attack, and more than 50,000 people could have a stroke, the NHS said.

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