Amore Health raises awareness about diabetes with SUGAR HIGH. SUGAR LOW

According to the Ministry of Health, one in every 11 adults has diabetes and up to half of these are not diagnosed.

“Yearly, there are five million diabetes and diabetes-related deaths and every 10 seconds a limb is amputated due to diabetes,” the Minister of Health, Isaac Adewole says.

“In fact, diabetes is now the most common cause of lower extremity amputation, the first or second commonest cause of end-stage renal disease in most centres worldwide and is one of the commonest causes of blindness.”

Sadly, diabetes is no longer a disease of the old or elderly. It can and does affect teenagers, children and even newborn.

Diabetes is simply a disease condition that results from high blood sugar levels and the body’s (pancreas) inability to produce enough insulin to convert the blood sugars into energy that body cells need – so sugar is NOT the only problem.

There are two major types of diabetes; the Type 1 or insulin-dependent diabetes which develops when the body’s immune system, due to a condition generally referred to as an auto-immune disease, destroys the insulin-producing cells of the pancreas and prevents the body from making any insulin. People living with this condition, therefore, require constant shots of insulin to enable the body utilise its blood sugar and maintains it at a healthy level.

Type 2 diabetes is the most prevalent form of diabetes and occurs when the body is unable to properly make or utilise insulin. You are more likely to develop type 2 diabetes if you are 45 or older, have a family history of diabetes or are overweight.

There are numerous misconceptions about diabetes including the consumption of sweet foods and pastries, the consumption of carbohydrate foods and the causative factors or risk factors that predispose one to the onset of the disease.

And while diabetes is incurable and is very costly to manage, little health pointers will usually be able to prevent more deaths from the condition if people were aware of them.

In a series of social media adapted videos and with a short documentary film, Amore Health seeks to educate the general public of these misconceptions and also highlight that more attention needs to be paid to other such sensitisations to decrease the fatalities resulting from the illness.

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