Want to avoid having hypertension, cancer, diabetes, then take 10,000 steps daily – Expert

Do you want to avoid having hypertension, diabetes and cancer, then ensure you take 10, 000 steps every day.

This was the expert advice of Prof. Olufemi Fasanmade of the Department of Endocrinology at the College of Medicine, University of Lagos (LUTH).

Prof. Fasanmade was one of the speakers at a media conference organised by pharmaceutical company, Mega Lifesciences, in line with this year’s World Diabetes Day in Lagos. Themed; ‘Access to Diabetes Care; If Not Now, When?’

World Diabetes Day is celebrated globally every November 14.

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The don advised Nigerians to be more active, keep slim and fit as a way to remain healthy.

Prof. Fasanmade’s words, “The first thing to do is to move; it’s very cheap.”

He warned that sedentary activity is as deadly as smoking or drinking.

He advised people to take advantage of the step counter which is available on many smartphones and which measures the number of steps one takes daily.

Fasanmade said: “We should make about 10,000 steps per day to keep hypertension, diabetes and cancer away. So, you can do three in one; physical activity.”

The endocrinologist notes that only a small percentage of people who are diabetic manifest symptoms.

He listed some of the symptoms of the condition to include passing “plenty” of urine, poor vision, poor erection, poor stamina, poor obstetric history including miscarriages and stillbirth, and itching on the skin.

He advised people living with protruding tummies to “change your lifestyle. If you have a protruding tummy, you have a high risk of diabetes. Watch what you eat and drink. It is not poverty that makes a person look slim.”

While raising alarm that diabetes can affect all age groups including children, the professor advised people to go for checkups, “The simple way to do this is to check your own blood sugar in a laboratory whether or not you have diabetes.”

Also speaking, Lifestyle Medicine Physician, Dr. Chinasa Amadi, said “With recent statistics predicting that one in 10 children born after the year 2000 will develop type 2 diabetes, there is no better time than today to begin advocacy.

She outlined some risk factors like unhealthy dietary habits, cigarettes, older age, physical inactivity, obesity, and family history of diabetes.

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Amadi added, “We need to go back to the basics – plant-based foods, our local foods, cooked not canned and processed.”

With diabetes described as a chronic disease according to the World Health Organisation (WHO), Diabetes Product Manager Mega Lifesciences, Ibukun Adetuyi cited that in 2019, diabetes was the ninth leading cause of death with an estimated 1.5 million deaths directly caused by diabetes.

She, therefore, urged Nigerians to take their health seriously.

“According to WHO, a healthy diet, regular physical activity, maintaining a normal body weight and avoiding tobacco use are ways to prevent or delay the onset of type 2 diabetes.”

Also, the Managing Director, Mega Lifesciences, Manesh Mehra, shared the vision of the firm – to take free screenings to communities and smaller towns across the nation to help them stay healthy.

Mehra said, “We want to take medical outreach and quality education about the diabetes and its complications and lifestyle. This way, we hope to grant them access and helping them take control of their health.”

Department of Endocrinologye College of MedicineProf. Olufemi FasanmadeUniversity of Lagos
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