Skip to content Skip to navigation

Caring for children and adolescents with diabetes

The theme of this year's World Diabetes Day (14 November) is diabetes in children and adolescents. The global awareness campaign aims to bring the spot light on diabetes and highlight the message that no child should die of diabetes. It also aims to increase awareness in parents, caregivers, teachers, health care professionals, politicians and the common public regarding diabetes.

World Diabetes Day (www.worlddiabetesday.org) is observed every year on November 14, because this day marks the birthday of Frederick Banting, who was credited with discovering insulin some 87 years ago. This day was first introduced in 1991 by the International Diabetes Federation (IDF) and the World Health Organization (WHO), in response to the alarming rise in diabetes around the world. In 2007, the United Nations made the day an official UN world day after the passage of the United Nations World Diabetes Day Resolution in December 2006. The UN recognized that diabetes is increasing at an epidemic rate and is affecting people of all ages.

Diabetes is one of the most common chronic conditions to affect children. It can strike children of any age-- even toddlers and babies. If not detected early enough in a child, diabetes can be fatal or it may result in serious brain damage. Yet diabetes in a child is often completely overlooked: it is often misdiagnosed as the flu or is not diagnosed at all.

In both urban and rural areas, diabetes in children and adolescents often does not get diagnosed in time. The reasons for this are manifold-- lack of education / awareness of the symptoms of this condition, lack of proper care, girl child stigma and poverty.

"Early diagnosis of diabetes in children is very poor in rural areas and some of them die because of it, in the absence of timely diagnosis and /or treatment, which is pretty shameful for us. Therefore the government should strengthen its rural healthcare services for early diagnosis and proper treatment /care of diabetes in children and adolescents" said Professor Dr CS Yajnik, Director, Diabetes Unit, King Edward Memorial Hospital , Pune , India .

Every parent, school teacher, school nurse, doctor and others involved in the care of children should be familiar with the warning signs or symptoms of diabetes which could be any one or more of the following:-- frequent urination, excessive thirst, increased hunger, weight loss, tiredness, lack of concentration, blurred vision, vomiting and stomach pain. In children with Type-2 diabetes these symptoms may be mild or absent.

Type-1 diabetes is an auto-immune disease that cannot be prevented. Globally, it is the most common form of diabetes in children, affecting around 500,000 children under 15 years of age. Finland , Sweden and Norway have the highest incidence rates for Type-1 diabetes in children. However, as a result of increasing childhood obesity and sedentary lifestyles, Type-2 diabetes is also increasing at a very fast pace in children and adolescents. In some countries, like Japan , Type- 2 diabetes has become more common in children than Type-1.

Every day more than 200 children are diagnosed with Type-1 diabetes, requiring them to take multiple daily insulin shots and monitor the glucose levels in their blood. This type of diabetes is increasing yearly at the rate of 3% amongst children and is rising even faster in pre-school children at the rate of 5% per year. Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA), a build-up of excess acids in the body as a result of uncontrolled diabetes, is a major cause of death in children with Type-1 diabetes. DKA can be prevented with early diagnosis and proper medical care.

Life for children living with Type-1 diabetes, in the developing world, is bleak indeed. About 75,000 children in the low-income and lower-middle income countries are living with diabetes in desperate circumstances. These children need life-saving insulin to survive. Many are in need of monitoring equipment, test strips and proper guidance to manage their condition in order to avoid the life-threatening complications associated with diabetes. A child's access to appropriate medication and care should be a right and not a privilege.

"A comprehensive approach that addresses diabetes risk factors is needed. Researchers have found that societal influences on teenage boys and girls can affect their diabetes, and that in most cases girls suffer more from these influences," said Dr Sonia Kakkar, a Delhi based diabetes specialist.

Type- 2 diabetes affects children in both developed and developing countries and is becoming a global public health issue with potentially serious outcomes.

It has been reported in children as young as eight years and now exists even in those who were previously thought not to be at risk. In native and aboriginal communities in the United States , Canada and Australia at least 1 in every 100 youth has diabetes. In some communities, this ratio is 1 in every 25. Global studies have shown that Type- 2 diabetes can be prevented by enabling individuals to lose 7-10% of their body weight, and by increasing their physical activity to a modest level.

"The stark reality is that many children in developing countries die soon after diagnosis," said Dr Jean-Claude Mbanya, President-Elect of the International Diabetes Federation (IDF), in a press release issued by IDF. Dr Mbanya further said, "It has been 87 years since the discovery of insulin, yet many of the world's most vulnerable citizens, including many children, die needlessly because of lack of access to this essential drug. This is a global shame. We owe it to future generations to address this issue now."

According to the International Diabetes Federation, "In many developing countries, particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa and some parts of Asia , life-saving diabetes medication and monitoring equipment is often unavailable or unaffordable. As a result, many children with diabetes die soon after diagnosis, or have a quality of life, and they develop the devastating complications of the disease early."

In order to support some of these children, the IDF created its Life for a Child Program in 2001. The program, which is operated in partnership with Diabetes Australia-NSW and HOPE worldwide, currently supports a total of 1000 children in Azerbaijan, Bolivia, The Democratic Republic of Congo, Ecuador, Fiji, India, Mali, Nepal, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, The Philippines, Rwanda, Sri Lanka, Sudan, The United Republic of Tanzania, Uzbekistan and Zimbabwe.

Although significant activities have been initiated in the past few years to improve health responses to diabetes, efforts are still inadequate, weak and fragmented. Progress is impeded by a public health system that places a higher priority on communicable diseases and maternal and child health services and by a private health system driven by curative medicine. However, a comprehensive health response to diabetes that addresses prevention, treatment, care and support needs for people with diabetes, needs more advocacy and partnership with different agencies that can bring in the desired changes in the life of every person living with diabetes.

IDF asks everyone around the world to help bring diabetes to light and to affect change to improve care for people living with diabetes. Find out more at www.worlddiabetesday.org

Amit Dwivedi

(The author is a Special Correspondent to Citizen News Service (CNS). Email: amit@citizen-news.org)

Comments

Steve L.'s picture

World hunger has been a continuous problem over the last hundred years, and it has been exacerbated in some places during the last fifty years – like in Haiti. Citizens of this island nation in the Caribbean have been resorting to eating dirt cakes, literally packing dirt into cookie size shapes and eating them, exposing them to all sorts of toxins and potential infections. Just last month, there was a resolution that went before the United Nations over whether or not food was a basic human right. Nearly every member voted for it – seven members were absent – and the final vote came in at 180 – 1. Only one country opposed the measure, and that country is one that is in no position to say anything, being that over 10% of its citizens live in poverty – wonder who? The United States of America was the sole nation to vote against the idea that human beings have the fundamental human right to food. Now, there are obviously good reasons why the US delegate voted it down – something about the government not liking the wording of the resolution – but it still happened. Just be thankful this new year that you have options like payday loans, and options like whether to go to Safeway or Albertsons.

Pages

Add new comment

Assamese Translator

Assam Times seeks English to Assamese translators!
Join our volunteer team.
Email editor@assamtimes.org.

Random Stories

DGP identified areas of concern

17 Mar 2012 - 3:20am | editor
DGP Jayanta Narayan Choudhury said that three districts -- Tinsukia, Dibrugarh and Sibsagar -- were areas of concern and put on maximum alert while Goalpara and Dhubri districts were vulnerable....

Gadkari on visit to Tripura

11 Feb 2018 - 4:32am | AT News
PRASENJIT SAHA AGARTALA: Union minister Nitin Gadkari is on a visit to Tripura on Sunday to campaign for the February 18 assembly polls. The senior BJP leader and minister is arriving in the...

Campaign to end for Phase I poll

5 Apr 2014 - 10:05am | AT News
Electioneering for the first phase of Lok Sabha polls is all set to end on Saturday. The campaigning will end at 5 in the afternoon.This phase covers Jorhat, Dibrugarh, Tezpur, Lakhimpur and Koliabor...

BTAD burning again: 3 killed

1 May 2014 - 10:21pm | Hantigiri Narzary
Bullets seem to have riddled BTAD again. In a fresh orgy of violence, unidentified miscreants shot dead three of a family and four others including a journalist were shot at in BTAD areas on Thursday...

Other Contents by Author

A day after the powerful blast, an eerie silence is prevailing in Paltanbazar even as the police have claimed a major breakthough into the incident. All shops and markets in the area are remaining closed although no organisation has given any call. Meanwhile, the police sources here say the attack was engineered by ULFA 709th battalion cadre Saranga Patowary who sneaked into the city three days back. Investigations are going on.
Minoti Khaund celebrated 50 years of her musical career as a violinist on the 29th of December 2007. It was a grand evening with a packed audience full of her friends, family and fellow musicians. The program had performances by Minoti's sister Pronoti Khaund on bhajans, her junior students and senior students on the violin, a vocal performance by well known writer Mitra Phukan (she is Minoti's sister-in-law ) and also a raag based song composed by Minoti herself by her nieces upcoming singer Anshumala and Sanjana. The grand finale was a duet by Minoti and daughter Sunita Bhuyan and a historic moment was created when they were joined by 8 year old Panchami Khaund, Minoti's grand daughter...
Altogether fourteen people have been injured while the suspected ULFA militants targeted a CRPF patrolling party with a powerful explosion in Paltanbazar area in the city at around 7-30 in the evening.Sources here say the ULFA’s 709 battalion top cadre Saranga Patowary is behind this attack. Patowary reportedly reached the city two days back.The explosion took place just a few meter away from the Paltanbazar police station. The injured people have been rushed to the Guwahati Medical College Hospital for treatment.City police superintendent has said ULFA is behind the blast which was targeted to a group of CRPF jawans. Health and family welfare minister Himanta Biswa Sarma visited the...
ULFA is stepping up its operation also in Upper Assam with blast in Sivasagar followed by an encounter with police. The incident took place at around 8 in the evening. No casualty has been reported but security has been beefed up throughout the district to avert further incident.
Altogether fifteen people have been injured while the suspected ULFA militants targeted a group of CRPF jawans with a powerful explosion in Paltanbazar area in the city at around 7-30 in the evening. The explosion took place just a few meter away from the Paltanbazar police station. The injured people have been rushed to the Guwahati Medical College Hospital for treatment. No militants outfit has yet to claim the responsibility but top ranked police and civil officials are there to oversee the rescue works. City police superintendent has said ULFA is behind the blast which was targeted to a group of CRPF jawans.The city buses in the area are asked to change their routes and a complete...
A grenade explosion in Lastgate area near Beltola has once again rocked the city just before a while. No casualty has been reported. Top ranked police and civil officials have arrived in the spot. All city buses on the route has been suspended. Details are awaited.
Four railway workers have been injured in Dibrugarh while suspectged ULFA militants lobbed powerful grenade at them on Saturday wee hours in Rongsai. According to information, suspected ULFa militants lobbed a grenade on a group of railway workers on Saturday wee hours while they were sleeping near their work site at Rongsal .Although no militant outfit has so far claimed the responsibility, ULFA is suspected to be behind the incident. While they are stepping up activities before the Republic Day
A two day North East India Investment Summit' is going on in the city’s Sarusajai Complex to woo the diaspora and seek investment in the state. Launched on Friday, an exhibition is also going on to showcase products from the mainly tribal entire northeastern states.Speaking to reporters officials hee say more than 70 such participants from all across the world are participating in the event and they are evincing keen interest in many areas including hill sector, education, upgradation of skills like IT, hydropower, housing and real estate.A non a non-resident Indian from Dubai said they are studying possibilities of a world class medical college besides investing in infrastructure...
One person died on the spot while a truck ran over him early morning on Saturday in Bagang are in Bihali. According to information, Dulan Baurik, a resident of Gohpur along with four others got down from the Itanagar boun bus at Borgang at around 3 am. A truck bearing No AS08A 1134 hit him after striking a bus. Dulan died on the spot and the driver was arrested by Bihali police.
The annual academic session of the North East India Geographical Society (NEIGS) will be held at Pandu College premises under the auspices of the Department of Geography of the college on February 9, with a day-long programme, stated a press release issued by NEIGS general secretary Bimal Kar.