Health
60 percent of type 2 diabetes preventable: Austrian experts
Vienna, Jan 28
Type 2 diabetes is preventable in up to 60 percent of cases if early signs are recognised and acted upon, experts have said.
"Eight
percent of the Austrian population suffers from diabetes but only
two-thirds know they have it," Xinhua news agency quoted Vienna General
Hospital's Thomas Stulnig as saying in a press conference Tuesday.
He
added that late diagnosis leads to enormous health costs and 20 percent
of patients have long-term damage by the time of diagnosis.
He
said the type 2 form of diabetes usually develops slowly and can be
prevented in the 60 percent of cases by an intensive lifestyle change.
Warning
signs for onset of the condition include fat accumulation on the
stomach, under two-and-a-half hours of exercise per week, increased
blood sugar levels, high blood pressure, and abnormal blood fat levels.
Austrian
Academic Institute of Nutritional Medicine (OeAIE) head Kurt Widhalm
said the most important things to counter the condition are weight loss
of five percent, a reduction in fat content in diet of 30 percent, a
reduction in saturated fat consumption, increased fibre intake of more
than 15 grams per day, and at least four hours of exercise per week.