Oroville Mercury-Register

Earlier diabetes tests recommende­d for overweight US adults

- By Lindsey Tanner

Overweight and obese Americans should start getting screened for diabetes earlier, at age 35 instead of 40, according to updated national guidelines published Tuesday.

The new advice stems from rising rates of both obesity and Type 2 diabetes, and research showing health benefits of prevention methods and early treatment. Three out of four U.S. adults is overweight or obese, which increases their chances for developing diabetes.

Among adults aged 18 and older, 14% already have diagnosed diabetes, and 33% have prediabete­s. Screening is recommende­d up to age 70.

The guidance from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, an advisory group to the U.S. government, was published online in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n. It updates the task force’s 2015 recommenda­tions, and says even earlier screening should be considered for overweight or obese American Indians, Black people, Hispanics and other groups with disproport­ionately high diabetes rates.

Screening means blood tests to measure sugar levels and sometimes involves drinking a sugary liquid first. The new guidance suggests that people whose tests are normal could be screened every three years.

Type 2 diabetes impairs the body’s ability to use insulin to regulate blood sugar, leading to high levels that can cause heart problems, organ damage and blindness. Prediabete­s means higher than normal blood sugar levels that can lead to full-blown diabetes.

Type 2 diabetes incidence has increased in recent years along with obesity rates. A 2001-17 report in the same journal shows the rate nearly doubled in kids aged 10-19, jumping from 34 cases per 100,000 kids to 67 per 100,000.

The task force’s guidance says evidence shows diet and physical activity can prevent or delay diabetes in adults with prediabete­s. The diabetes drug metformin has been shown to do the same but has not been approved for that use, the task force notes. The drug is not riskfree.

 ?? JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman with Type 2 diabetes prepares to inject herself with insulin at her home in Las Vegas in 2017.
JOHN LOCHER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman with Type 2 diabetes prepares to inject herself with insulin at her home in Las Vegas in 2017.

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