After increasing for almost two decades, the annual number of new diabetes cases in U.S. adults fell by 35 percent between 2008 and 2017, to 1.3 million, according to a new by researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, reported this week in the British Medical Journals鈥 Open Diabetes Research and Care. The share of U.S. adults living with a diabetes diagnosis peaked at 8.2 per 100 in 2009, then leveled to 8 per 100 or about 21 million. CDC estimates that one in four adults with diabetes have not been diagnosed. 鈥淭he findings suggest that our work to stem the tide of type 2 diabetes may be working 鈥 but we still have a very long way to go,鈥 co-author Ann Albright, director of CDC鈥檚 Division of Diabetes Translation. 鈥淲e must continue proven interventions and deploy innovative strategies if we鈥檙e going to see a continued decline in type 2 diabetes among Americans.鈥

Related News Articles

Headline
The White House May 22 released its Make America Healthy Again report that focuses on childhood chronic disease. The report highlights findings from the MAHA鈥
Headline
The Food and Drug Administration May 16 announced it cleared the first blood test to diagnose Alzheimer鈥檚 disease. The test, created by Fujirebio Diagnostics,鈥
Headline
The National Institutes of Health May 8 released an analysis that found incidences of 14 types of cancer increased among people under age 50 from 2010-2019.鈥
Headline
A New England Journal of Medicine study published yesterday found success in administering dostarlimab, an immunotherapy drug, to a group of 103 cancer鈥
Headline
Overall cancer death rates declined steadily among both men and women from 2018 through 2022, according to the National Institutes of Health's latest annual鈥
Headline
A study published April 14 by JAMA Network Open found that rates of pancreatic and colon cancer rose among young adults from 2000-2021. Researchers examined鈥