28.6 C
Sierra Leone
Tuesday, May 7, 2024

“More exercise needed to fight Diabetes” – Salome Jones

HomeAYV News“More exercise needed to fight Diabetes” – Salome Jones

“More exercise needed to fight Diabetes” – Salome Jones

Date:

Related stories

President Bio joins Heads of State in Gambia for 15th OIC Summit

His Excellency President Dr. Julius Maada Bio is attending...

New Speaker reaffirms commitment to serve diligently

Sierra Leone’s newly elected Speaker of Parliament, Rt. Hon....

Wake Up Sierra Leone hosts AYV CEO, SLAJ President

Bringing you the best of multicultural entertainment and news...

WE ARE LIVE: AYV Dstv Channel 399 Opens in Nigeria today

Watch live in Nigeria and across Africa. Freetown, Sierra Leone–...

As her organisation has been one of the leading organisations in fighting diabetes she maintained that “my organisation is looking after over one thousand diabetes patients across the country and also have workers not only in Freetown but also in the provinces”. She emphasised that more exercises needed to be done in order to combat diabetes.
She emphasised that more education needs to be done about diabetes, noting that her organisation has been going around schools to raise awareness to school going pupils about the disease.
She emphasised that people should not eat plenty of carbohydrate, fat and oil and protein food in Representative, Dr Anders Nordstorm emphasised for more to be done so that for people who are living with diabetes to be aware about their status.
He lamented that one needs to exercise, avoid eating plenty of sugar and smoking in order to increase one chances of not having diabetes.
Director of Non Communicable Diseases (NCD), Dr Bash Taqi said diabetes is on the increase, adding that NCD are diseases one gets through his or her life style.
He highlighted the risk factor of diabetes, namely, alcohol drinking, tobacco smoking and physical inability. He elaborated that four hundred and forty two million people are diabetes patients across the world, adding that the figure will double by 2030.
Dr Taqi said 7.5 million people are dying every year of Diabetes, noting that diabetes is responsible for death and disability on a large scale.
He emphasised that having diabetes will lead one to have kidney diseases, blindness, heart attack and stroke.

Latest stories

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once