A Change of Guard

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Thursday, 7 April 2016

Diabetes prevention needed


A medical assistant administers an insulin shot to a diabetes patient in India. A new report has found that the Kingdom lacks the resources to diagnose and adequately treat diabetes. AFP
A medical assistant administers an insulin shot to a diabetes patient in India. A new report has found that the Kingdom lacks the resources to diagnose and adequately treat diabetes. AFP

Diabetes prevention needed
ppp Thu, 7 April 2016
Yesenia Amaro


Cambodia’s prevalence of diabetes, and the mortality rate stemming from the chronic disease, remains low compared to other countries, but the Kingdom needs to step up its work with non-communicable diseases in order to prevent the system from becoming overwhelmed in years to come, according to a new report.

Diabetes prevalence has seen a higher spike in low- and-middle-income countries than in high-income countries over the past decade, according to a Global Report on Diabetes released today by the World Health Organization.

In 2014, an estimated 422 million adults were living with diabetes worldwide, compared to 180 million in 1980. A total of 1,420 people succumbed to diabetes in 2014 in the Kingdom, while another 3,460 deaths were attributed to high blood glucose, according to a country profile released by the WHO.

During the same year, Cambodia had a 5.9 per cent diabetes prevalence rate.

“In Cambodia, if we look at the prevalence of diabetes, it’s still significantly lower than in most countries,” said James Rarick, technical officer with WHO Cambodia.

“But the concern here is that the . . . mortality rate from [non-communicable diseases] is about half of the population now, and it’s been steadily increasing.”


While diabetes only accounted for 2 per cent of deaths in 2014, other non-communicable diseases accounted for half.

“The big challenge for the health care system is to evolve from primarily dealing with communicable diseases to now early detection and management of chronic diseases,” Rarick said.

The WHO is working with the Ministry of Health to provide early detection and treatment for hypertension and diabetes at local health centres, rather than provincial hospitals, though Rarick allowed that’s not likely to happen anytime soon.

“It’s still a pretty long way to go . . . given the capacity is still quite low at the health centre level,” he said.

Non-communicable disease epidemics hit in waves, Rarick said. During the first wave, risk factors start to go up; during the second, people start showing up at health centres with severe complications; and once the third wave hits, it could overwhelm the system.

“It’s a myth that NCDs are only a problem of the rich countries,” he said. Ministry of Health spokesman Dr Ly Sovann said that while diabetes prevalence is low in Cambodia, it’s still a concern.

He agreed with the report’s finding that in Cambodia medicine, procedures and basic technology to screen and treat diabetes is not generally available.

“In the future, we need to expand the capacity of new technology, education and prevention to provide good care for people with diabetes,” he said.

Nen Sokha, a Khmer literature teacher at Boeung Trabek High School, lost his 68-year-old father, Nen Kheang, to diabetes last November. In 2014, his father’s diabetes worsened and his kidneys started to fail.

He needed dialysis, but Sokha’s family didn’t trust the few places in Phnom Penh that offered such treatment.

Sokha had to take his father to Vietnam for dialysis, but it got too expensive and burned through most of his savings, and the family had no choice but to bring Kheang back to Cambodia.

“I didn’t know that diabetes could be so dangerous,” Sokha said.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

how fitting ... one article promotes doughnut shop and the next diabetes awareness ... too much refined flour , excessive sugar [ legal addictive substance , according to many studies done by different universities and scientists] and probably using trans-fat to fry the doughnuts proven to be bad for the cardiac system...soon in the future , khmers' waistline will increase like their US and European counterpart which their belly will reach down to their knees and their ''behind'' wider than elephant's behind...
and at same time their wallet size will decrease from the need to pay for drugs to control their newly discover disease-- heart disease, diabetes , neuropathy from diabetes etc...... while ,of course , drugs companies will see their revenues increasing more than 100 percent ..but then again, what else can the US and Europe export to other countries [ they don't produce anything anymore -well except weapons] to make their corporations owners wealthier ? diseases and drugs [ legal and illegals ]

Anonymous said...


I always wonder how often the food vendors change their frying oils at food stands.

Hey guy, US is good at producing lots of rules and regulations to put businesses out of business, don;t you agree? Let see...how many rules are in ObamaCare....62,000 pages? Wow, I bet Obama never read one page of those rules.

Refine sugar and soft drinks will do it. Oh well, enjoy life now and worry about ill health when it does strike? FDA, Pharma and Doctors know it best - - leave it to them to solve all the world's ailments. But when I last checked...the diseases seem to have the upper hand. But if everybody buy ObamaCare, we can conquer all the known disease in in one year. No, maybe if everybody would get vaccinated we all would die in ten years from mercury poisoning.


Unravel the sickness scam by the pharmaceutical companies!

Anonymous said...

It is the responsibility of every individual, but you do at your peril.