Title: Diabetes
1Diabetes
- NPEP WORKSHOP
- Dwight Pargee, Fitness Coordinator
- United Indian Health Services
2Type 2 diabetes
- Expanding horizons on diagnosis, treatment, and
prevention
3Understanding Diabetes
- What is diabetes? (Normal and abnormal sugar
processing in the body) - Type 1 2 diabetes
- Type 2 diabetes in American Indians
4What is Diabetes?
- A problem with the way your body uses food to
store and make energy. - (and lots of other stuff)
5What is Diabetes?
- A chronic disease characterized by high blood
sugar which can effect many organs and systems of
the body - A disease which can damage tissues before an
individual is diagnosed or has symptoms - An illness which may affect individuals
differently - Some aspects of diabetes are still poorly
understood
6Understanding Diabetes
- Glucose (a kind of sugar) is an important fuel
for your body - Insulin (a hormone or messenger protein that is
made in the pancreas) helps glucose get into many
kinds of cells in the body - With diabetes, there is a problem with the
glucose getting into the cell where it can be
used for fuel
7Understanding Diabetes
- When the glucose cant get into the cell
properly, it stays in the bloodstream - When the glucose level in the bloodstream rises,
the glucose may attach to proteins or cause other
imbalances leading to build-up of toxins in the
body (and you dont feel a thing)
8Understanding Diabetes
- Over time, this can result in damage to the
tissues (and you dont feel a thing) - Insulin resistance may also lead to tissue
damage independent from that of high blood sugar
(and you dont feel a thing)
9A Key Player - Insulin
- Insulin a hormone made by special cells in the
pancreas gives signals to many tissues,
including the signal to move glucose from the
blood into the cells. Insulin mainly tells the
body to store energy for the future. - Insulin Resistance - the decrease in the tissues
ability to respond to insulins signal.
10A Key Player - Insulin
- Insulin a hormone made by the Beta cells in
the pancreas gives signals to many tissues,
including the signal to move glucose from the
blood into the cells. Insulin mainly tells the
body to store energy for the future. - Insulin Sensitivity - the ability of different
tissues to respond to insulin. - Insulin Resistance - the decrease in the tissues
ability to respond to insulins signal.
11What Kind of Diabetes?
- Type 1
- Complete shutdown of cells that make insulin
- Cannot live without insulin
- Type 2
- The body still makes some Insulin
- The insulin signal is not as powerful
resistance - Gestational Diabetes or Diabetes of Pregnancy
(like type 2 diabetes)
12 Feature Type 1 Type 2
13(No Transcript)
14Normal Glucose Metabolism
Nutrition Carbohydrates (starches sugars)
Tissues (Muscle and Fat)
Liver
Glucose
glucose storage (glycogen) and production
Pancreas
Insulin
15What Goes Wrong in Diabetes?
Nutrition (carbohydrates)
Tissues (Muscle and Fat)
Liver
Type 2 insulin resistance
Glucose
excess glucose production
Pancreas
Insufficient or no insulin
16What is Insulin Resistance?
17Insulin Resistance
- Insulin is like a messenger-key to a lock on
the cell, it opens the lock to let in glucose - Many cells, especially muscle and fat cells, need
insulin to help get the glucose in the cell. - Folks with insulin resistance need more
messenger-keys (insulin) to let the
glucose into the cell
18Insulin Resistance
- Insulin resistance can also result in damage to
blood vessels in the body that leads to heart
attacks and strokes. - This damage usually starts before the
blood sugar starts going up - (and you dont feel a thing
- until your first heart attack.)
19More Key Players
- Pancreas - monitors levels of glucose in blood
continuously and provides enough insulin to keep
blood glucose level lt120mg/dL - Muscle - the tissue that is best able to burn
glucose in its cells. - Fat stores excess energy, communicates with the
liver, responds to signals given by insulin - Liver - stores and releases sugar, providing
enough to keep blood glucose level gt60mg/dL.
20The Epidemiology of Diabetes in the USA
- Incidence
- Type 1 30,000/year
- Type 2 850,000/year
- GDM 3-8 of pregnancies
Prevalence
150,000
750,000
10,000,000
10,000,000 (6,000,000 undetected)
Estimates based on U.S. population of 250 million
21Global Epidemic Of Diabetes
- More than 135 million people worldwide had
diabetes in 1995 (4.0) - 300 million people are expected to have the
disease by 2025 (5.4) - 42 increase in developed countries
- 170 increase in developing countries
- Urban dwellers more likely to have the disease
than rural inhabitants
King, et. al., Diabetes Care, 1998
22Age-adjusted prevalence of diagnosed diabetes
among American Indians/Alaska Natives aged 20
years or older, by IHS area, 2001
Age-adjusted based on the 2000 U.S.
population. Source FY01 IHS APC file. Excludes
data from 39 service units (7 of the IHS user
population).
23Increase in diabetes prevalence among persons
aged 2059 years, by age U.S. general
population and American Indians/Alaska Natives,
1990 and 1998
Source Mokdad et al. Diabetes Care
200023127883, and Indian Health Service
outpatient data. 1829 years in U.S. general
population.
24Prevalence of diagnosed diabetes among children
and young people by age group, 1990-2001
Per 1000
79 increase
68 increase
106 increase
25 increase
Year
Source IHS Diabetes Program Statistics
25Mortality Rates in American Indians Alaska
Natives
Trends in Indian Health, 1997 Age adjusted rate
per 100,000
26Burden of Diabetes in the U.S.
- Increases the risk of heart attack and stroke by
24 fold - The leading cause of new blindness, end stage
renal disease, and amputations - 193,140 deaths from diabetes a year (7th)
- Costs 98 billion or more per year
CDC National Diabetes Fact Sheet 1998
27- About 80 percent of people with type 2 diabetes
are overweight. - Type 2 diabetes is often part of a metabolic
syndrome that includes obesity, elevated blood
pressure and high levels of blood lipids. - Unfortunately, as more children and adolescents
become overweight, type 2 diabetes is becoming
more common in young people.
28Diabetes Why Me?
- Its in your genes right?
- NO.
- Getting more calories than needed, over a
healthy weight - Physical activity Sedan and screen lifestyle
- Aging
29Diabetes Why Me?
- Psychosocial and Cultural trauma?
- What evidence?
- Other Diseases and conditions
(e.g. smoking, medications)
- We dont know everything! (not yet
anyway)
30Why is this happening in Children Adolescents?
- Born to a mother who had gestational diabetes
- High birth weight qualified
- Low birth weight qualified
- Less physical activity
- More food, calories that we dont use, calories
from things like saturated fats - Stress and depression?
- We dont know all the answers
31Diabetes in the American Indian community
- The actual reasons for the increase in type 2
diabetes remain both elusive and complex our
work toward a complete understanding of this will
no doubt continue for some time to come.
However, several observations belie a simple
genetic causation. Fifty to sixty years ago,
type 2 diabetes was nearly nonexistent in
American Indian populations. Lest we think this
was merely a problem of poor diagnostic abilities
or case finding, consider that type 2 diabetes
prevalence increased 106 in the 15-19 year old
American Indian/Alaskan Native populations alone
from 1990-2001
32Risk Factors in Children Adolescents
- Family history of type 2 diabetes in first or
second degree relative - Born to a mother who had gestational diabetes
- High or low birth weight qualified
- American Indian, Hispanics, Blacks
- Hypertension, blood pressure
- Dyslipidemia, cholesterol and fats in the blood
- Acanthosis Nigricans
- Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome
Insulin resistance
33Diabetes Research
- Diabetes Control Complication Trial (DCCT)
- Type 1 Diabetes, 10 year study
- Blood glucose control decreases complications
34Diabetes Related Complications
- Cardiovascular Disease
(Heart attacks and Stroke) - Blood Vessel (Peripheral Vascular) Disease
- Kidney Disease (Nephropathy)
- Nerve Disease (Neuropathy)
- Eye Disease (Retinopathy)
- Dental/Peridontal Disease
35Summary of (even more) Recent Research Findings
- It is even more important to lower cholesterol
and fats in the blood for patients with diabetes
in order to prevent heart attacks and stroke - Good blood sugar control in pregnancy may reduce
the risk of complications by 50. - Smoking increases your chance of getting diabetes
36Type 2 Diabetes and Complications
High Blood Sugar
High Cholesterol
Smoking
Excess calories and Insulin Resistance
High Blood Pressure
High Blood Levels of Insulin
Reaven GM, Am Heart J 19911211283-1288.
37Natural History of Type 2 Diabetes
Environmental factors e.g. nutrition, more
calories than needed, physical inactivity
Onset of diabetes
Complications
Disability
susceptible physiology
IFG IGT
Death
High Sugar High Cholesterol High Blood Pressure
Kidney Eyes Nerves
Blindness Renal failure CHD Amputation
Insulin resistance Hyperinsulinemia Low HDL
FPG gt126 mg/dL CPG gt200 mg/dL
IFG 110-125 mg/dL IGT 140-199 mg/dL
Heart Attacks and Strokes
38Foundations of Therapy
- Education, Education, Education
- Self management, individual learning styles
- Simplicity (i.e. avoid complexity!)
- Nutrition
- Identify barriers to change
- Family community support
- Physical Activity
39At least Two Approaches To Fitness
- Traditional
- Frequency 3-4 days/wk
- Intensity 65-85 of maximum heart rate
- Time Minimum of 20 minutes/session
- Alternative
- Physical activity every day.
- Moderate intensity (brisk walking)
- Accumulate 30 minutes or more every day
40the all-American diet
Oh yeahNow That place was really a greasy
spoon!
41Type 2 Diabetes
- The most important factor in caring for Type 2
Diabetes that we can control - is our lifestyle.
- We need to try to live in a way that matches how
our bodies were made to live.
42The Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP)
- 3,234 participants with impaired glucose
tolerance (IGT) - Average age 51 yrs (range 25-85 yrs)
- 45 from ethnic/minority groups (171 American
Indian participants, 5 of the study)
43 DPP Goals Primary
- To prevent or slow the development of type 2
diabetes in persons with impaired glucose
tolerance (IGT) and other high risk
characteristics
44Lifestyle Intervention
- Intensive Lifestyle Modification
- A comprehensive program using a Case Management
approach with the following specific aims
- Reduction of fat and calorie intake
- Physical activity at least 150 minutes per
week - gt 7 loss of body weight
45DPP Study Results
- Participants from the lifestyle group reduced
their risk of getting type 2 diabetes by 58
46DPP Study Results
- Lifestyle intervention worked very well in
elderly (gt60 yrs), reducing development of
diabetes by 71
47What do the results of the DPP mean to our
communities?
- Screening for diabetes AND for IGT in AI/AN
communities - Create lifestyle programs for diabetes
prevention case management approach - Purchase metformin for diabetes prevention
48Type 2 Diabetes Prevention
- The most important factor in caring for and
preventing Type 2 Diabetes that we can control is
our lifestyle. - We need to try to live in a way that matches how
our bodies were made to live.
49...youve got to be careful if you dont know
where youre going, because you wont get there.
- ...when you come to a fork in the road, take it.
Yogi Berra
50Questions?
- Anybody seen my magic wand?
51Sandy Lake School Diabetes Prevention Program
- The Sandy Lake First Nation School Diabetes
Prevention Program was created during the 1998
school year to help students in grades 3 and 4
learn about and practice healthy eating and
physical activity behaviours the only known ways
to prevent diabetes. Developing healthy behaviors
at a young age should give students the skills
and motivation to continue these behaviors into
adulthood. - The program was designed to address the
individual, social, and structural levels of
influence on children's behaviors associated with
making healthy food choices and physical
activity. - The 4 components of the Sandy Lake School
Diabetes Prevention Program include a classroom
curriculum, family outreach, peer activities, and
changes in the immediate school and store
environment
52Sandy Lake program description
- COMPONENTDESCRIPTIONClassroom Curriculum
- 17 lessons on healthy eating and physical
activity. Focus on the identification of healthy
foods, skills building, behavior modeling, and
food preparation. - Family
- Information booths during school parent night
events - Letters sent home on healthy eating and physical
activity - Weekly radio show topics
- Articles in the local newsletter
- Peer
- Angel Cooking Video Club (kids cooking club)
- Diabetes Kids interviews on the Sandy Lake Youth
Radio show - Youth Radio Show, which focuses on healthy
lifestyles, is now offered in collaboration with
Sandy Lake's Brighter Futures Project - Environment
- Board of Education Policy of no pop or chips on
school grounds - School breakfast snack program
- Healthy food promotion in local stores
- Community-wide SLHDP diabetes prevention
activities
53Curriculum description
- CLASSROOM CURRICULUM
- The Sandy Lake First Nation School Diabetes
Prevention curriculum is a culturally appropriate
healthy lifestyle curriculum for students in
grades 3 and 4. The lessons draw upon social
learning theory and traditional learning styles
and includes role modeling, taste tests, skills
building, goal setting, and games. - This is a 2 year curriculum which begins in grade
3 and continues in grade 4. Each of the 17 units
contains 2 lessons which are taught once a week
for approximately 30 minutes each. The units of
the Sandy Lake curriculum address three main
components - making healthy food choices (what are healthy
food choices, encouragement for students to make
healthy food choices, and providing students with
the skills and opportunities to make healthy food
choices in their daily lives) - daily physical activity (what are different kinds
of physical activities, the health benefits of
physical activity, and providing students with
opportunities for doing more daily physical
activities) and - learning about diabetes (basic information on
diabetes and prevention) - Each unit begins with an introductory story from
an imaginary community called Winding Lake and
includes two lessons with activities that
reinforce the concepts of the unit. The stories
and lessons are sequenced and build upon one
another. Each unit begins with an introductory
story from an imaginary community called Winding
Lake and includes two lessons with activities
that reinforce the concepts of the unit. - www.sandylakediabetes.com
54Pathways
- Pathways, a research study funded by the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, is a
school-based health promotion program that
includes physical activity, nutrition, classroom
curriculum, and family involvement. The primary
purpose of the Pathways study is to prevent
obesity among American Indian children by
promoting increased physical activity and
healthful eating behaviors.
55Pathways
- Pathways includes four components. This
intervention was designed so that all four
components are to be implemented together. We
highly recommend that you implement Pathways in
this way. The four components of Pathways are - Curriculum
- Family
- Food Service
- Physical Activity
- Each of these components and accompanying
materials has been included for the use of
interested teachers, school personnel, and health
promotion practitioners. These materials can be
viewed and printed. - http//hsc.unm.edu/pathways
56www.thecommunityguide.org
- Regular physical activity is associated with a
healthier, longer life and with a lower risk of
heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes,
obesity, and some cancers. Despite all the
benefits of physical activity, most school-aged
children in this country are sedentaryonly one
in four gets the recommended amount of physical
activity each day (30 minutes of moderate
activity or 20 minutes of vigorous activity).
Lack of physical activity has also contributed to
a sharp rise in childhood obesity over the last
20 years. Given that regular physical activity
will help young people stay healthier, it is
important to know what strategies work best to
increase physical activity. - A systematic review of published studies,
conducted on behalf of the Task Force on
Community Preventive Services by a team of
experts, found that physical education (PE)
classes taught in schools that included which
enhance the length or activity levels, are
effective in improving both physical activity
levels and physical fitness among school-aged
children. Based on this review, the Task Force
issued a recommendation to implement programs
that increase the length of, or activity levels
in, school-based PE classes based on strong
evidence of effectiveness.
57Physical education in schools
- Background on the Interventions
- To increase the amount of time students spend
doing moderate or vigorous activity in PE class,
these programs seek to change PE curricula by
making classes longer or having students be more
active during class. - Interventions reviewed included changing the
activities taught (e.g., substituting soccer for
softball) or modifying the rules of the game so
that students are more active (e.g., in softball,
have the entire team run the bases together when
the batter makes a base hit). Many interventions
also included health education. - Findings from the Systematic Review
- In all 14 studies reviewed, students physical
fitness improved. - In 5 studies measuring activity levels during PE
class, all recorded increases in the 1) number of
minutes spent in moderate or vigorous physical
activity, 2) percentage of class time spent in
moderate or vigorous physical activity, and/or 3)
intensity level of physical activity during
class. - The median estimates from the reviewed studies
suggest that modifying school PE curricula as
recommended will result in an 8 increase in
aerobic fitness among school-aged children. - Modifying school PE curricula was effective
across diverse racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic
groups, among boys and girls, elementary- and
high-school students, and in urban and rural
settings. - In a separate literature review, having students
attend school PE classes was not found to harm
academic performance.
58Social support
- A systematic review of published studies,
conducted on behalf of the Task Force on
Community Preventive Services by a team of
experts, found that efforts made in community
settings to provide social support for increasing
physically activity are effective. Based on this
review, the Task Force issued a strong
recommendation to implement these efforts. - Background on the Interventions
- These interventions focus on changing physical
activity behavior through building,
strengthening, and maintaining social networks
that provide supportive relationships for
behavior change (e.g., setting up a buddy system,
making contracts with others to complete
specified levels of physical activity, or setting
up walking groups or other groups to provide
friendship and support). - Interventions included in the review involved
either creating new social networks or working
within existing networks in a social setting
outside the family, such as in the workplace. - Findings from the Systematic Review
- In all 9 studies reviewed, social support
interventions in community settings were
effective in getting people to be more physically
active, as measured by various indicators (e.g.,
blocks walked or flights of stairs climbed daily,
frequency of attending exercise sessions, or
minutes spent in physical activity). - The median estimates from the reviewed studies
suggest that social support interventions in
community settings can result in a 44 increase
in time spent being physically active and a 20
increase in the frequency of physical activity. - These interventions also improved participants
fitness levels, lowered their percentage of body
fat, increased their knowledge about exercise,
and improved their confidence in their ability to
exercise. - These interventions were effective in various
settings including communities, worksites, and
universities, among men and women, adults of
different ages, and both sedentary people and
those who were already active.