City
Epaper

Southeast Asia sees over 482,000 diabetes-related deaths every year: WHO

By IANS | Updated: November 26, 2024 14:40 IST

Colombo, Nov 26 Southeast Asia, including India, sees over 482,000 diabetes-related deaths every year, said the World Health ...

Open in App

Colombo, Nov 26 Southeast Asia, including India, sees over 482,000 diabetes-related deaths every year, said the World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday, while calling for the need to boost the prevention and control measures against the blood sugar condition.

Diabetes is a global health concern and can potentially lead to complications such as blindness, kidney failure, heart attack, stroke, and lower limb amputation.

The WHO noted that the countries in the Southeast Asia Region have made significant progress in provisioning services for the management of diabetes.

Till June, over 60 million people have been placed on protocol-based management for diabetes and hypertension. This is expected to reach 100 million by 2025.

However, despite efforts, challenges remain. More than 260,000 children and adolescents with Type 1 diabetes face limited access to insulin and monitoring. The incidence of type 2 diabetes is also increasing among young people in the Region, the global health body said.

“Bridging the service gaps to ensure timely access to diabetes care can save lives,“ said Saima Wazed, Regional Director, WHO South-East Asia.

Wazed called for making "care services equitable, comprehensive, accessible, and affordable" for all.

She was speaking at the two-day Regional Commemoration of World Diabetes Day 2024 under the theme ‘Breaking Barriers, Bridging Gaps’ in Colombo, Sri Lanka.

To address the growing burden of diabetes, health experts and officials also adopted ‘Colombo Call to Action’.

The Call to Action underlines catalytic actions and collective commitments of Member countries to accelerate efforts to unite, integrate, innovate, treat, track, and educate to reduce the risk of diabetes and ensure that those diagnosed with the disease have access to quality treatment and care.

WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, in a video message to the gathering, said that more than half of the 800 million people living with diabetes “do not receive treatment".

The WHO chief pressed the need to "intensify efforts to meet global targets and ensure better prevention, diagnosis, and management of diabetes”.

The UN agency suggested measures such as equipping primary healthcare with standard treatment protocols, essential medicines, quality diagnostics, and skilled professionals to meet the growing demand for diabetes care.

Wazed noted that preventing diabetes "is a shared responsibility of governments, healthcare providers, and communities".

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketIt's part of game, can understand: Rahul reflects on Gill's fiery exchange with Crawley

Cricket"He was in lot of pain gripping the bat": KL Rahul on Rishabh Pant's finger injury

Other SportsNeeraj Chopra to face gold medallist Arshad Nadeem in Silesia Diamond League next month

InternationalUnion Minister Hardeep Singh Puri concludes "fruitful, productive" visit to Iceland

InternationalLavrov meets Kim Jong Un as North Korea backs Russia in Ukraine war

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologySugar & oil boards in govt offices, schools ‘excellent step’ for healthy India: Experts

TechnologyIndia’s food delivery market to see 13-14 pc growth in coming years: Report

TechnologyNifty’s closing above 25,330 could reignite bullish momentum: Experts

TechnologyAIIA’s national seminar to explore trends in Ayurvedic surgical practices

TechnologyAAIB report: Don’t jump into any conclusions at this stage, says Civil Aviation Minister