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Alice: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Alice.
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Neil: And I'm Neil. Can you pass me my drink, Alice?
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Alice: Cola, Neil? That's very unhealthy.
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Neil: You told me to stop drinking coffee because it's unhealthy.
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Now you're telling me cola is bad too.
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Alice: Cola is full of sugar. There are about six teaspoons in each can.
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Neil: At least. That's pretty sugary, I admit!
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Alice: Well, we're talking about diabetes today.
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Diabetes is a condition where the body can't control the amount of glucose or sugar in the blood.
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If left untreated, diabetes can cause many complications, including heart attack, stroke,
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kidney failure, and blindness.
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Neil: I'm not diabetic, though, Alice, so what's the problem?
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Alice: Well, diabetes is on the rise or increasing all over the world.
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And particularly type 2 diabetes where risk factors include obesity – or being very overweight
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unhealthy diet and lack of physical exercise.
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Neil: I see. Well, while I think about that, maybe you could ask me today's quiz question.
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Alice: OK. Can you tell me how many people in the world suffer from diabetes?
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Is it... a) 4.15 million?
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b) 41.5 million?
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Or c) 415 million?
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Neil: I'll take a guess and say b) 41.5 million.
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Alice: Well, we'll find out if you got the right answer later on, Neil.
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Now, why do you think people are eating less healthily than they used to?
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Neil: Well, processed food has become very popular, and whilst it often tastes really good,
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it isn't always a healthy choice.
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Alice: Do you eat a lot of processed food, Neil?
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Neil: Of course not, Alice!
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Processed food, by the way, is food that's been changed from its natural state,
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for example, by freezing or re-hydrating it, or by adding ingredients to it such as sugar, salt or fat.
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But let's move on now and talk about exercise.
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Alice: OK – but I hope you aren't planning to have fried chicken again for lunch today
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from that dodgy fast-food joint round the corner.
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Now, one reason that people are taking less exercise than they used to is because of lifestyle changes.
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With increasing urbanisation people are no longer doing jobs that involve as much physical activity.
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Neil: Yes, it's true.
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And urbanisation means the growth of towns and cities as people move there from the countryside to live and work.
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We're all sitting in cars, and offices, or on our sofas in front of the TV.
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Alice: But it's also true that children are less active than they used to be.
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I remember running around all the time outdoors when I was a kid.
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Nowadays, they're all in front of screens, playing computer games or watching videos on YouTube.
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Neil: So, adults and children are at higher risk of developing diabetes if they are overweight
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because they are likely to have higher levels of sugar in their blood.
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Let's hear more about this from Dr Etienne Krug from the World Health Organization.
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Dr Etienne Krug: Diabetes is a kind of continuum.
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Gradually the levels of sugar in the blood increase until reaching the level of being
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diagnosed with diabetes.
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But people, before reaching diabetes, have too high level of sugar as well, sometimes,
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and that can be dangerous too
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particularly causing cardiovascular diseases, which contributes to mortality too.
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Neil: What's a continuum, Alice?
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Alice: It's something that changes slowly over time.
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So in this case, as people increasingly eat food that's high in sugar and fat,
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the amount of sugar in their blood increases.
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Neil: And having a high blood-sugar level may reach a tipping point
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Or a point when small changes become significant enough to cause a big change
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And you develop diabetes.
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But even if you don't develop diabetes, high blood sugar can be damaging to your health.
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Alice: It isn't only damaging to the individual, though.
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Diabetes has a huge cost to society – $827bn is currently being spent every year to treat the disease.
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Neil: That's big bucks!
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What can we do – what can governments do – to tackle this health crisis, Alice?
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Alice: Well, a key approach is to tackle the global rise in obesity because this addresses
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not only diabetes but other diseases, too, such as cancer and cardiovascular disease.
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Let's hear more from Dr Krug about ways to do this.
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IDr Etienne Krug: We need a combination of approaches to promote physical activity and
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to improve the ways we eat and that goes from breast feeding or even working with young
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kids to increase healthy eating.
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But the sugar tax is a good example that has contributed in Mexico to a decrease in sales of sugary drinks.
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And sugary drinks ... just one drink can sometimes represent more sugar than a person needs for the whole day.
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Neil: Government schemes to encourage healthy eating sound like a good plan, but trying
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to get kids to eat vegetables might be tough!
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Alice: Or stop you from drinking sugary drinks, Neil, for that matter.
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Neil: Leave me alone!
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Alice: Alright, then.
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But the government tax on sugary drinks has worked in Mexico ... and the UK government
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is also planning to do this.
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OK! Now remember I asked you, Neil:
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How many people in the world suffer from diabetes? Is it... a) 4.15 million? b) 41.5 million?
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Or c) 415 million?
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Neil: And I said 41.5 million.
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Alice: Sorry, that's the wrong answer, Neil.
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Neil: Of course it's the wrong answer!
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Alice: Yes, I'm afraid so.
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According to the Diabetes International Federation, based in Belgium, as of 2015, an estimated
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415 million people have diabetes worldwide.
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This represents 8.3% of the adult population, with equal rates in both women and men.
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Neil: OK, I'll be drinking herbal tea from now on.
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Let's listen to the words we learned today. They were:
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diabetes
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glucose
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on the rise
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obesity
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processed food
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urbanisation
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continuum
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tipping point
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Neil: Well, that's the end of today's 6 Minute English. Please join us again soon!
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Both: Bye.