Home Featured Posts 300,000 Michiganders have Diabetes and They Don’t Know it

300,000 Michiganders have Diabetes and They Don’t Know it

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Are We at Risk for Diabetes?

Are we one of the 292,000 Michigan residents who have diabetes and doesn’t know it?

Kay Bammert, Office Manager at the U.P. Diabetes Outreach Network, is helping make folks aware of diabetic symptoms. On March 27th is American Diabetes Alert Day, a nationwide public awareness campaign to identify those at risk for developing or already have diabetes.

Diabetes is a serious disease that can damage one’s eyes, heart and kidneys.

How do your feet feel and look?

Early detection and education is crucial in preventing or reducing these serious health complications. You are at risk for diabetes if you answer yes to ONE or more of the following:
* I am age 45 and older
* I am overweight
* I get little or no exercise
* I have a family history of diabetes
* I have high blood pressure (130/80 or higher)
* I am of certain ethnic decent (African American, Hispanic, Pacific
Islander, Asian American and Native American)
* I am a woman who had diabetes when pregnant or had a baby weighing more
than nine pounds at birth

The Diabetes Risk Test is available by calling the UP Diabetes Outreach Network at (906) 228-9203 or going online to www.diabetesinmichigan.org and clicking on Diabetes Alert Day.

Warning signs of diabetes include:

* going to the bathroom a lot
* feeling hungry or thirsty all the time
* blurry vision
* losing weight without trying
* feeling tired all the time
* tingling/numbness in the hands or feet
* cuts/bruises that are slow to heal

What’s alarming is that 80% show no warning signs of diabetes when they are diagnosed.

If you have any of the above risk factors or signs of diabetes, talk with your doctor or health care provider about being tested for diabetes. One or two simple blood tests can detect diabetes. Currently, there is no cure for diabetes; however, early detection can prevent or delay diabetes-related complications.

Sound the Alert: Got Diabetes? Get Educated! Take control of your health. Diabetes education is available in our local community.

To find a Diabetes Educator in our area, contact your local hospital or the Upper Peninsula Diabetes Outreach Network at (906) 228-9203 or online at www.diabetesinmichigan.org

Of if you have questions, call Kay
Kay Bammert
Office Manager
U.P. Diabetes Outreach Network
121 N. Front St. Suite B
Marquette, MI 49855
906/228-9203
906/228-4421 (fax)
www.diabetesinmichigan.org
updon@diabetesinmichigan.org

For people with diabetes, too much glucose in the blood can cause serious foot complications. Click Here to see the slide show.

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