Recognizing
National Diabetes Awareness Month
Kristie Kulinski, Aging Services Program Specialist
Diabetes is among the most common chronic diseases experienced
by older adults. More than 30 million Americans have diabetes. That's 9.4%
of the U.S. population. This figure increases with age, with diabetes
affecting 25.2% of adults 65 and older, according to the CDC's 2017 National Diabetes Statistics Report.
ACL grantees are reaching older adults and making an impact
every day through these CDSME programs. Take the Health Foundation of South
Florida, for example, which has offered the DSMP and Programa de Manejo
Personal de la Diabetes for more than a decade. Programs take place in
senior centers, YMCA’s, parks and recreation centers, libraries, churches,
hospitals, and clinics throughout South Florida. Since September 2015, they
have reached 2,700 Floridians, and 81% of them have successfully completed
the program.
In another part of the country, the Rhode Island Department of
Health has offered DSMP, Programa de Manejo Personal de la Diabetes, and
other CDSME programs in senior centers, health centers, libraries, and
beyond. Programs are situated in health equity zones—areas
where low economic status, substandard education, and lack of opportunities
for employment or housing are being addressed.
Learn more about how ACL is helping to address diabetes
through its CDSME Programs.
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