Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Diabetes to Double or Triple in U.S. by 2050: Government















By Xavier Briand, Reuters
Sat Oct 23, 2010

(Reuters) - Up to a third of U.S. adults could have diabetes by 2050 if Americans continue to gain weight and avoid exercise, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention projected on Friday.

The numbers are certain to go up as the population gets older, but they will accelerate even more unless Americans change their behavior, the CDC said.

"We project that, over the next 40 years, the prevalence of total diabetes (diagnosed and undiagnosed) in the United States will increase from its current level of about one in 10 adults to between one in five and one in three adults in 2050," the CDC's James Boyle and colleagues wrote in their report.

"These are alarming numbers that show how critical it is to change the course of type-2 diabetes," CDC diabetes expert Ann Albright said in a statement.

"Successful programs to improve lifestyle choices on healthy eating and physical activity must be made more widely available because the stakes are too high and the personal toll too devastating to fail."

The CDC says about 24 million U.S. adults have diabetes now, most of them type-2 diabetes linked strongly with poor diet and lack of exercise.

Boyle's team took census numbers and data on current diabetes cases to make models projecting a trend. No matter what, diabetes will become more common, they said.

"These projected increases are largely attributable to the aging of the U.S. population, increasing numbers of members of higher-risk minority groups in the population, and people with diabetes living longer," they wrote.
Diabetes was the seventh-leading cause of death in the United States in 2007, and is the leading cause of new cases of blindness among adults under age 75, as well as kidney failure, and leg and foot amputations not caused by injury.

"Diabetes, costing the United States more than $174 billion per year in 2007, is expected to take an increasingly large financial toll in subsequent years," Boyle's team wrote.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Journal 5: We are Family


















We are currently in the midst of the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression. This so-called "Great Recession" has taken a great toll on American families, who've seen their standard of living lowered considerably. In a time when families have had to make serious cuts, everything from retirement to vacations to college is on the table. How has your family adapted to these economic times? What has been the impact of the faltering economy on the dynamics of your own family?

Include at least two of the following pieces in your discussion:
  • "Families are Trimming Plans to Pay for College, Survey Finds" (Washington Post)
  • "More Dads at Home Playing Mr. Mom" (Chicago Sun-Times)
  • "Feeding the Recession's Youngest Victims" (CBS News)
  • "How Do People Make Ends Meet?" (24/7 Wall Street)

Articles are located in the eR.

Due: Thursday. Oct. 28th
 

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Week 10: Family in America



















In so many ways, his family's life feels like a string of accidents, 
unforeseen, unintended, one incident begetting another ... They 
were things for which it was impossible to prepare but which 
one spent a lifetime looking back at, trying to accept, interpret, 
comprehend. Things that should never have happened, that 
seemed out of place and wrong, these were what prevailed, 
what endured, in the end.

—Jhumpa Lahiri, The Namesake (2003)
 
Tu 10.26
Read: “Raising Cain” by Debora J. Dickerson, “Three Fathers” by Kevin Sweeney, “Bumping into Mr. Ravioli” by Adam Gopnik
In-Class: Reading discussion; Presentations; Preview—Cause and effect essay

Th 10.28
In-Class: Cause and effect essay
Due: Expository essay (Final draft; Attach draft 1); Journal 5
 
UPCOMING:
 
Week 11:
Tu 11.2
Read: CR—“Talk in the Intimate Relationship: His and Hers” by Deborah Tannen, “I Want a Wife” by Judy Brady
In-Class: Reading discussion; Presentations

Th 11.4
Read: CR—“Romance: Meeting Girls is Easy” by Donald Miller, “Sex Without Intimacy: No Dating, No Relationships” by Brenda Wilson, “What We Talk About When We Talk About Love” by Raymond Carver; ALL—p. 3-68
In-class: Reading discussion; Presentations; Preview—Editorial essay