Statistics
DIABETES
Diabetes is the 7th leading cause of death. Type 1 diabetes
usually occurs within children. Type 2 diabetes is the most common form
of diabetes, usually occurring after age 45. Complications include:
blindness, kidney disease, amputations, heart attack and stroke.
Prevalence in African Americans:
- Approximately 2.3 million African Americans have
diabetes. 1/3 of them do not know it.
- African Americans are 1.7 times more like to have
diabetes, than Non-Latino Whites.
- 25% of African Americans between the ages of 65 and 74
have diabetes.
- 1 in 4 African American women over 55 years of age have
diabetes.
Prevalence in Native Americans:
- Native Americans have the highest rates of diabetes in
the world.
- Type 2 diabetes among Native Americans is 12.2% for those
over 19 years of age.
- Diabetes has reached epidemic proportions among Native
Americans. Complications from diabetes are major causes of death and
health problems in most Native American populations.
- Amputations among Native Americans are 3-4 times higher
than the general population.
Prevalence in Hispanics/Latinos:
- Type 2 diabetes is 2 times higher in Latinos than in
Non-Latino Whites.
- 1.2 million of all Mexican Americans have diabetes.
- Nearly 16% of Cuban Americans in the U.S. between the
ages of 45-74 have diabetes.
- Approximately 24% of Mexican Americans in U.S. and 26% of
Puerto Ricans between the ages of 45-75 have diabetes.
Diabetes Source: American
Diabetes Association
HYPERTENSION (also referred to as high
blood pressure)
- 23% of Americans aged 20-74 have hypertension.
- Over three quarters of women aged 75 and over have
hypertension.
- 64% of men aged 75 and over have hypertension.
- As many as 50 million Americans age 6 and older have
hypertension.
- Hypertension is most prevalent in the African American
population. It affects about one out of every three African Americans.
- One in five Americans has hypertension.
- Non-Hispanic blacks and Mexican Americans are more likely
to suffer from hypertension than are non-Hispanic whites.
- Over 14,000 deaths each year are attributed to
hypertension.
- Complications include: heart attack, stroke, kidney
failure, and blindness.
Source: Health, United States,
2000
American Heart Association
National Vital Statistics Reports, Vol. 48, No. 11
NUTRITION AND EXERCISE
- According to Advance Data 255, the average daily intake
of fat grams for the period 1988-91, totaled 96 grams for males and 67
for females.
- It is recommended that the number of fat grams not exceed
25 grams of fat per day.
Physical Activity:
- People who are usually inactive can improve their health
and well-being by becoming even moderately active on a regular basis.
- Physical activity need not be strenuous to achieve health
benefits.
- Greater health benefits can be achieved by increasing the
amount (duration, frequency, or intensity) of physical activity.
Benefits of Regular Physical Activity:
Source of the following
information: Centers for Disease Control,
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion.
Regular physical activity that is performed on most days of
the week reduces the risk of developing or dying from some of the
leading causes of illness and death in the United States. Regular
physical activity improves health in the following ways:
- Reduces the risk of dying prematurely.
- Reduces the risk of dying from heart disease.
- Reduces the risk of developing diabetes.
- Reduces the risk of developing high blood pressure.
- Helps reduce blood pressure in people who already have
high blood pressure.
- Helps control weight.
- Helps build and maintain healthy bones, muscles, and
joints.
- Helps older adults become stronger and better able to
move about without falling.
Examples of Moderate Amounts of Activity:
- Washing and waxing a car for 45-60 minutes
- Playing volleyball for 45 minutes
- Playing touch football for 30-45 minutes
- Gardening for 30-45 minutes
- Walking 1 3/4 miles in 35 minutes (or 20 minutes per mile)
- Basketball (shooting baskets) for 30 minutes
- Playing a Basketball game for 15-20 minutes
- Bicycling 5 miles in 30 minutes
- Pushing a stroller 1 mile in 30 minutes
- Water aerobics for 30 minutes
- Swimming laps for 20 minutes
- Jumping rope for 15 minutes
- Stairwalking for 15 minutes
NOTE: To avoid soreness and injury, individuals
contemplating an increase in physical activity should start out slowly
and gradually build up to the desire amount to give the body time to
adjust. Please consult a physician before beginning a new program of
physical activity.
ORGAN DONATION
According to the United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS),
there are more than 100,000 persons on the national transplant waiting
list.
- 16 persons die each day waiting for a life saving organ
transplant.
- Every 16 minutes, a new name is added to the national
waiting list.
Source: UNOS
Minorities
Form More Than Half Of
Kidney Transplant Waiting List*
Minorities Donate In Proportion
To Their Population Distribution
BONE MARROW
At any given moment, more than 3,300 persons are searching
the bone marrow registry.
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