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1 in 8 US adults have this deadly disease, and even more are dangerously close to developing it

Sep 9, 2015, 02:59 IST

A person receives a test for diabetes during Care Harbor LA free medical clinic in Los AngelesThomson Reuters

New research suggests that half of all U.S. adults have diabetes or pre-diabetes, conditions that can lead to other complications later in life.

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The study of government health surveys echoes previous research and shows numbers increased substantially between 1988 and 2012 although they mostly leveled off after 2008.

Overall, 12-14% of adults had diagnosed diabetes in 2012, the latest data available. Most of that is Type 2 diabetes, the kind linked with obesity and inactivity.

Almost 40% have pre-diabetes, meaning elevated blood sugar levels that could lead to full-fledged disease. Studies have shown lifestyle changes can delay or prevent diabetes in these people.

That 40% is more than the Centers for Disease Control accounted for in 2014, when they estimated that 1 in 3 adults in the US has pre-diabetes.

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Diabetes is a disease that causes the body to either resist the effects of insulin - the main hormone responsible for breaking down the sugar we eat into blood sugar - or to not produce enough of that hormone to keep our blood sugar steady.

Currently, 29 million people in the US have diabetes. That number could increase if the almost 40% of people living with pre-diabetes don't change their habits.

The study is based on surveys involving in-home exams and questionnaires. It was published in Tuesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.

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