header-left
File #: 0344X-2018    Version: 1
Type: Ceremonial Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 11/2/2018 In control: Tyson
On agenda: 11/5/2018 Final action: 11/7/2018
Title: To declare November as National Diabetes Month in the City of Columbus and to express support for the National Diabetes Association’s 2018 theme and effort to raise awareness by Promoting Health after Gestational Diabetes.
Sponsors: Priscilla Tyson, Elizabeth Brown, Mitchell Brown, Jaiza Page, Emmanuel V. Remy, Michael Stinziano, Shannon G. Hardin
Title

To declare November as National Diabetes Month in the City of Columbus and to express support for the National Diabetes Association’s 2018 theme and effort to raise awareness by Promoting Health after Gestational Diabetes.

Body

WHEREAS, approximately every 23 seconds, someone in the United States is diagnosed with diabetes; and

WHEREAS, diabetes is a chronic illness that can lead to serious complications, such as heart disease, stroke, kidney disease, blindness, and amputation; and

WHEREAS, nearly 30 million Americans have diabetes, including more than 1.3 million in Ohio - in fact an estimated 86 million adults have pre-diabetes, a condition that places them at increased risk for developing type 2 diabetes and heart disease; and

WHEREAS, the 2018 American Diabetes Association Month Theme, “Promoting Health after Gestational Diabetes is focused on promoting health after gestational diabetes - Gestational diabetes is a type of diabetes that develops during pregnancy: Mothers who’ve had gestational diabetes need to know that they and their children have an increased lifelong risk of developing type 2 diabetes - while gestational diabetes generally goes away after a baby is born, it should be noted that these individuals have a greater risk of diabetes and these children have an increased risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes, in fact, half of all women who had gestational diabetes later develop type 2 diabetes; and

WHEREAS, the Central Ohio Diabetes Association reports that in Central Ohio, more than 200,000 people have diabetes, there are 13,000 new cases every two years, half of all diabetics are undiagnosed, and one in ten people will develop diabetes in their lifetime, with the CDC projecting that number to rise to one in three in the next twenty years if changes aren’t made; and

WHEREAS, diabetes affects people from all walks of life, and it takes a particular toll on disadvantaged and minority communities; for instance, Columbus Public ...

Click here for full text