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October
3, 2001
Contact: Jennifer Day, (313) 577-1058, jday@med.wayne.edu
International experts to discuss latest
type 2 diabetes research at upcoming WSU symposium
WSU
Hood Comprehensive Diabetes Center sponsors
4th International Motor City Diabetes Symposium Oct. 19
The
world’s leading experts on the treatment and prevention of type 2 diabetes
will gather for the Wayne State University School of Medicine’s Fourth Annual
International Motor City Diabetes Symposium on Friday, Oct. 19, in the Kresge
Eye Institute auditorium.
About
170,000 people die of complications from type 2 diabetes annually. In addition
to being the leading cause of blindness and end-stage kidney failure
(necessitating kidney transplants or kidney dialysis), nearly 80,000 amputations
each year result from nerve and vascular complications associated with diabetes.
However, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recently announced a
study that showed that at least 10 million Americans at high risk for type 2
diabetes can drastically lower their chances of getting the disease with proper
diet and exercise.
This
symposium, which targets physicians, health-care providers, policymakers and
health-insurance executives, seeks to educate participants about prevention and
treatment techniques that can save lives and potentially billions of dollars in
health-care costs. Diabetes and its complications is the fourth-costliest
health-care issue in the United States, costing an estimated $130 billion per
year.
“We
need to discuss who is going to pay for fitness club memberships? Who is going
to pay for healthy food? Who is going to pay for nutritional counseling?” said
George Grunberger, MD, medical director of the Hood Diabetes Center. “This
could save us billions of dollars, and that’s not even taking into account the
incalculable cost of human suffering.”
Presentations
at the symposium will feature:
With more than 1,000 medical students,
WSU is among the nation’s largest medical schools. Together with the Detroit
Medical Center, the school is a leader in patient care and medical research in a
number of areas including cancer, genetics, women’s and children’s health,
and the neurosciences.
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