Grateful
Well-Known Member
A woman I work with is type 2 and has been for a while. She was pretty good (her words) and not very overweight but she is now having problems. I'm only 47 and need to take a long view as statisticaly I should be dead in 19 years. I'm aiming much higher!
Nineteen years! I am not sure where you get that statistic, unless you already have a life-shortening disease (in addition to diabetes).
I could not find a full actuarial life table for New Zealand, so instead, I used the American one (https://www.ssa.gov/oact/STATS/table4c6.html). It is likely that life expectancy in New Zealand is higher than in America, so the following estimates are conservative.
If you are 47 years old and a female American, you are expected to live another 35.96 years, on average. This may sound odd because it is above the average life expectancy that you will see in the general reports (as opposed to the detailed actuarial table I have linked to). The reason is that you survived chilhood and reached 47 already and are still alive. This automatically raises your life expectancy.
Even if you accepted the common statement that "diabetes lowers life expectancy by 10 years" then you could expect to live for another 25.96 years, not 19. But here's the rub: that is an average figure. If you successfully bring your BG levels under control, at non-diabetic (or close to non-diabetic) levels, and keep them there, the 10-year figure is meaningless. Yes, you need to be vigilant. But I agree with the earlier posters who are suggesting you might want to chill out a bit.
I feel for you because your reaction is identical to mine in the few weeks after my diagnosis. With the passage of time, comes a bit of perspective.
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