News
Diabetes on the Rise: Age and Weight Major Factors

United States: Data from the CDC estimated that almost 16 percent of American adults, exactly 1 in 6 people, suffer from diabetes.
Age and obesity seriously raise the risk for the disease that develops when the body does not properly use insulin, causing high blood sugar levels. Diabetes left untreated may cause disability or be fatal, as reported by HealthDay.
Dominates Cases
About 95% of diabetes incidence is T2DM, which develops when the body’s cells are incapable of responding to insulin appropriately. Insulin is a type of hormone used in the human body to balance sugar or glucose in the body. The excess weight presents one of the strongest risk factors known to be associated with type-2 diabetes.
New statistics obtained between mid-2021 and mid-2023 showed a dramatic increase in diabetes prevalence since the time of the 9.7% rate recorded in 1999-2000 among US adult population.
There was a significant gender gap in diabetes rates in 2023: An estimated 18% of men and 13.7% of women have the illness, data compiled by researchers at the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics show.
Not surprisingly, diabetes rates rose with age: Adulthood prevalence by age groups was low among the youthful, at 3.6% among the adults below 40 years old, but increased to 12.1% among those aged between 40 and 59 years and 20.5% among those aged more than 60 years.
Obesity and Education as Key Factors
Obesity also mattered: In addition, the NCHS study showed that 24.2 percent of obese adults have diabetes. That is almost double of those people who were considered overweight but not obese at 12.3% and 6.8% for normal/underweight adults.

Finally, education also seems to matter: For those with a high school education only, 19.6% of them are diabetic, whereas that number is much lower, 10.7%, for those with a college education, according to the study.
Undiagnosed Cases Pose Hidden Health Threats
The report, published Nov. 6 as an NCHS Data Brief, also noted that many cases of diabetes aren’t diagnosed, posing a real health danger: Clinical diabetes is present in 4.5% of the adult Americans but these people have no idea they are suffering from this disease, as reported by HealthDay.
That is something that few consider to be a risk, the researchers said, as “high blood sugar levels over time impacts several body systems such as the nervous system, the kidneys, retina, cardiovascular system, blood vessels and the eyes.”
News
UN Warns: Bird Flu Could Devastate Global Economy

United States: A United Nations food agency has issued a stark warning about the rapid spread of the H5N1 bird flu virus, calling it an “unprecedented” global food safety threat that requires urgent, coordinated action.
Escalating Crisis: Millions of Birds Lost
A Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) United Nations briefing identified worldwide poultry death masses and rising infections that cross between animal groups. Wild bird populations suffered from H5N1 disease in more than 300 species starting in 2021 and causing its spread to new distances according to The Hills.
FAO Deputy Director-General Godfrey Magwenzi emphasized the severe consequences:
“The disease is leading to serious impacts on food security, rural jobs, and rising consumer costs.”
Call for Coordinated Global Action
Beth Bechdol shared his opinion as another FAO Deputy Director-General that nations must collaborate to achieve desired outcomes.

According to an old wisdom a chain achieves its maximum strength through its least robust element. Animal health protection alongside human health protection can be achieved through international collaboration to decrease the impact of bird flu in both local and international scales.
The FAO recommends nations to enhance their bird flu surveillance capabilities while bettering their reporting systems and increasing laboratory capacities and implementing vaccination strategies together with biosecurity measures.
Bird Flu in the U.S.: Impact and Response
According to the CDC, the U.S. is currently managing 70 bird flu cases, affecting 41 dairy farms and 24 egg-producing facilities. While officials state there is no evidence of human-to-human transmission, concerns remain over its impact on the food supply.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture started a $1 billion plan which aims to battle the virus along with stabilizing egg market prices. The existing economic consequences of the virus outbreak have commenced.
#UN agency warns of ‘unprecedented’ #bird #flu threat as #H5N1 #virus jumps to #mammals …
— Microbes.info (@MicrobesInfo) March 19, 2025
| #pathogen | #infections | #AvianInfluenza | #birdflu | #avianflu | #publichealth | By @thisisbartosz.bsky.social via @politico.eu https://t.co/whr6b8ZX6I
Egg Prices Surge as Outbreak Disrupts Supply
The outbreak has created higher egg prices which forces restaurants to make customers pay more for meals with eggs. News reports indicate that the Justice Department began investigating important egg producers after discovering evidence of price manipulation related to the bird flu crisis.
New Bird Flu Strain Discovered in Mississippi
A bird flu strain of heightened virulence that the U.S. had not seen since 2017 was identified in a Mississippi commercial bird herd. Officials confirmed the new strain does not originate from the current H5N1 epidemic but experts remain watchful due to The Hills report.
What’s Next?
Global health experts advise taking rapid coordinated actions to stop the bird flu outbreak from escalating further because of growing worries regarding food safety and monetary consequences. Surveillance strengthening combined with preventive investments and market price fairness stands as the vital foundation for controlling the ongoing crisis.
News
Daytime Sleepiness in Seniors Linked to Higher Dementia Risk

United States: Drowsy during the daytime?
Research findings suggest that daytime sleepiness among senior citizens signals an elevated risk of dementia development.
The journal Neurology published research showing women aged 80 experienced two times greater risk of dementia when their daytime sleepiness increased throughout five years, as reported by HealthDay.
Sleep Disruptions May Be an Early Warning Sign
“The brain requires sleep for cognitive health because this rest period allows mental rejuvenation to improve clear thinking and information retention” according to senior researcher Yue Leng who serves as associate professor of psychiatry at the University of California-San Francisco in the news release.
According to Leng sleep-related problems seem to affect cognitive aging processes and might detect or increase risks for dementia in women aged 80 years old.
Study Tracks Sleep Patterns and Cognitive Decline
The research team studied 733 women who were 83 years old on average for five years. The participants showed no signs of dementia or mild cognitive impairment when the study began.

Women utilized wrist devices during the three-day tracking phase at the study commencement point, followed by the termination point.
The devices monitored sleep pattern variations among 56% of participants across five years.
During the five-year study period, 22% of participants developed mild cognitive impairment, alongside 13% who suffered from dementia.
Sleep pattern shifts are linked to potential brain deterioration, according to results obtained in the study.
Among the study participants who maintained consistent sleep patterns, dementia developed in 8% but increased to 15% among those whose nighttime sleep deteriorated and reached 19% among participants who experienced daytime sleepiness.
Dementia Risk More Than Doubles with Daytime Sleepiness
Research outcomes showed that women experiencing increased sleepiness demonstrated a dementia risk, which was 2.2 times higher after accounting for additional risk variables.

“We observed that sleeping, napping, and circadian rhythms can change dramatically over only five years for women in their 80s,” Leng said.
“This highlights the need for future studies to look at all aspects of daily sleep patterns to better understand how changes in these patterns over time can be linked to dementia risk,” she added.
Experts Call for Sleep-Focused Interventions
The study findings suggest sleep serves as an essential brain protectant, according to Dr. Marino Muxfeldt Bianchin and his editorial partner, who are professors of internal medicine at the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil, as reported by HealthDay.
“Initiatives focusing on improving sleep efficiency, encouraging lifestyle changes, and implementing cognitive interventions may be essential in mitigating dementia risk in the aging population,” Bianchin wrote.
News
CDC Warns of Rising Dengue Fever Cases Among U.S. Travelers

United States: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued a warning about increasing dengue fever cases among U.S. travelers who are projected to experience more cases throughout this year.
Record-High Cases Reported, Surge Expected in 2025
The number of dengue fever cases detected among U.S. travelers reached “record high” levels during the previous year when 3,484 cases were reported which marked an 84 percent surge from the previous figures, as reported by The Hills.
“This trend is expected to continue with increased dengue activity in endemic areas in 2025,” the warning from the CDC reads.
High Transmission in the U.S. Territories
Dengue transmission continues at high levels across specific United States regions together with selected global areas, while Puerto Rico, along with the U.S. Virgin Islands, attains similar transmission rates within the Americas.

Travelers can acquire dengue with greater ease when they visit sunnier regions from March through September, which heightens their risk of infection.
Recent years have brought a growing number of virus cases and these increases primarily affect the Americas based on World Health Organization (WHO) reports.
Developing nations reported 7.6 million virus cases to the WHO in 2024, showing 3.4 million confirmed cases along with over 16,000 serious cases and more than 3,000 fatalities from the disease.
Dengue fever cases in Puerto Rico have continued to surpass the outbreak threshold since Last February 2024. Public health declared an emergency status in March 2024 and continues to this day.

Dengue cases on the island totaled 6,291 for 2024 alongside more than 52 percent of patients needing hospital care and 13 fatalities documented by the CDC.
U.S. Hotspots for Travel-Related Cases
Recommendations have been issued for a dengue outbreak emergency in the U.S. Virgin Islands since August 2024 and remain current, as reported by The Hills.
A total of 208 dengue cases occurred in 2024, followed by 30 cases in 2025, according to early March records. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recorded that Florida, California and New York had the most travel-associated dengue cases throughout 2024.
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