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Diabetes in women
Diabetes is a group of metabolic diseases in which a person has high blood sugar due to problems processing or producing insulin. Diabetes can affect people of any age, race, or sex. It can affect people with any lifestyle.
Between 1971 and 2000, the death rate for men with diabetes fell, according to a study in Annals of Internal Medicine. This decrease reflects advances in diabetes treatment.
But the study also indicates the death rate for women with diabetes didn’t improve. In addition, the difference in death rates between women who had diabetes and those who didn’t more than doubled.
The death rate was higher among women, but there has been a shift in sex distribution of type 2 diabetes showing higher rates in men.
The findings emphasize how diabetes affects women and men differently. The reasons included the following:
Women often receive less aggressive treatment for cardiovascular risk factors and conditions related to diabetes.
Some of the complications of diabetes in women are more difficult to diagnose.
Women often have different kinds of heart disease than men.
Hormones and inflammation act differently in women.
The most current reported statsTrusted Source from 2015 found that in the United States 11.7 million women and 11.3 million men were diagnosed with diabetes.
Global reports from 2014 by the World Health Organization (WHO)Trusted Source state that there were an estimated 422 million adults living with diabetes, up from 108 million reported in 1980.
Symptoms of diabetes in women
If you’re a woman with diabetes, you may experience many of the same symptoms as a man. However, some symptoms are unique to women. Understanding more about these symptoms will help you identify diabetes and get treatment early.
Symptoms unique to women include:
1. Vaginal and oral yeast infections and vaginal thrush
An overgrowth of yeast caused by the Candida fungus can cause vaginal yeast infections, oral yeast infections, and vaginal thrush. These infections are common in women.
Read more- https://www.healthline.com/health/diabetes/symptoms-in-women#symptoms-in-women