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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: 15 years + diabetes has + diabetes  Related to the article below (Last Update: 7/1/2008)


Moose Jaw Times-Herald
Charity cyclists did not have safety permits
CTV.ca, Canada -
The eldest Hurtubise had been living with juvenile diabetes since the age of 15. The "Ride of a Lifetime" was the culmination of two years of training, ...
Charity ride turns tragic as two cyclists run down Globe and Mail
'So proud' of kids Winnipeg Sun
Cyclist killed during charity ride Winnipeg Sun
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Childhood diabetes increase daily: study
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia - 13 minutes ago
The rate of Type 1 diabetes in children is climbing at a rate of three per cent a year. Katherine Faulks, of the AIHW's diabetes unit, said the incidence of ...
Nick Jonas Speaks Out About Diabetes
HULIQ (press release), NC - 57 minutes ago
Nick believes that managing diabetes has brought him and his mother closer together, stating that their relationship is "definitely stronger and more ...
Quality of care for diabetes, vascular disease relates to success ...
Pioneer Press, MN -
Ten Allina clinics and two HealthEast clinics improved their diabetes scores by 15 percentage points or more from 2006 to 2007. ...
Watch out for the wrong kind of sugar
Hindu, India -
Fears that fructose and HFCS are fuelling the obesity epidemic and triggering insulin resistance and diabetes have been circulating for years (New Scientist ...
Quebec cyclist killed in Manitoba was riding with his teenage children
The Canadian Press -
Police and executives with the diabetes foundation declined to name the 45-year-old BC man killed in the collision, saying it's unclear if his family has ...
Kelowna cyclist killed in Manitoba CKFR
all 36 news articles »
VIVUS Announces New Data From Qnexa Diabetes Study
Medical News Today (press release), UK -
The pipeline includes: Qnexa?, which is in phase 3 for obesity and phase 2 for diabetes; Testosterone MDTS?, for which a phase 2 study has been completed ...VVUS
Hearing Loss and Diabetes: You Might Not Know What You're Missing
Annals of Internal Medicine -
Evidence has shown that close monitoring and regulation of blood glucose decreases the likelihood of renal and retinal complications of diabetes. ...
Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease in Overweight Children Linked to ...
Medscape (subscription) -
The Rest Haven Foundation; the National Institute of Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases; the National Center for Research Resources of the National ...
People's pharmacy
Houston Chronicle, United States - Jun 29, 2008
Diabetes doctors were disappointed recently when three studies showed that aggressive blood-sugar control did not protect people with diabetes from heart ...
Source: Google News

Diabetic nephropathy in type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes: An epidemiological study -
AR Andersen, JS Christiansen, JK Andersen, S … - Diabetologia, 1983 - Springer
... of diabetic nephropa- thy: sex, calendar year, domicile and ... be- tween onset of diabetes
and first ... such as Goodpasture's syndrome and glomerulonephritis [15]. ...

HYPERGLYCEMIA AS A RISK FACTOR FOR CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE IN TYPE 2 DIABETES -
M Laakso - Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1999 - Elsevier
... complications, even in nondiabetic individuals, has been published ... subjects without
clinically manifest diabetes were published ... based on 4 to 15 years of follow ...

The Continuing Epidemics of Obesity and Diabetes in the United States -
AH Mokdad, BA Bowman, ES Ford, F Vinicor, JS Marks … - JAMA, 2001 - Am Med Assoc
... In 2000, approximately 15 million US adults aged 18 years or older had
diagnosed diabetes (6.3 million men and 8.7 million women). ...

The thrifty phenotype hypothesis Type 2 diabetes -
CN Hales, DJP Barker - British Medical Bulletin, 2001 - British Council
... comes from a study showing that obesity in childhood has a greater ... By the age of
15 years, boys and girls who later developed type 2 diabetes were above ...

Worldwide increase in incidence of Type I diabetes-the analysis of the data on published incidence … -
P Onkamo, S V??n?nen, M Karvonen, J Tuomilehto - Diabetologia, 1999 - Springer
... Malta 14.7 0.5 (?2.15; 3.19) 0.7078 ... because of incomplete case- ascertainment and
death from undiagnosed diabetes. ... where the study period was 18 years or more ...

Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus, hypertension and hyperlipidaemia (syndrome X): … -
DJP Barker, CN Hales, CHD Fall, C Osmond, K Phipps … - Diabetologia, 1993 - Springer
... a baby of average birthweight has achieved optimal ... J (1991) Hypertension and
non-insulin dependent diabetes'. ... the Paris Prospective Study, 15-year follow- up. ...

Prognosis of diabetics with diabetes onset before the age of thirtyone -
T Deckert, JE Poulsen, M Larsen - Diabetologia, 1978 - Springer
... Treatment in the Steno Memorial Hospital has always been free of charge for ... 180
(59%) patients were referred with a duration of diabetes of 15 years or less ...

The Rising Prevalence of Diabetes and Impaired Glucose Tolerance: The Australian Diabetes, Obesity … -
DW Dunstan, PZ Zimmet, TA Welborn, MP de Courten, … - Diabetes Care, 2002 - Am Diabetes Assoc
... The prevalence of diabetes is similar to that reported ... whites (7.3% for those aged
20 years) but not as ... for Hispanics (7), Asian Indians (6,15), American Pima ...

Declining Incidence of Nephropathy in Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus -
M Bojestig, HJ Arnqvist, G Hermansson, BE Karlberg … - New England Journal of Medicine, 1994 - content.nejm.org
... was diagnosed before the age of 15 years between 1961 ... After 20 years of diabetes,
the cumulative incidence ... among the patients in whom diabetes developed from ...

Mortality and survival in Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus -
G Panzram - Diabetologia, 1987 - Springer
... survival time of 10-15 years in females and 6-9 years in males, respectively [33].
On the other hand, Type 2 diabetes with onset in the elderly has little or ...

Source: Google Scholar

Diabetes has an effect on the heart and arteries equivalent to ageing 15 years, new research has shown.

People with diabetes fell into the high-risk category for cardiovascular disease (CVD) 15 years earlier than those without the condition, scientists found.

They were also up to four times more likely to have CVD than healthy individuals. A team led by Dr Gillian Booth, from the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences in Toronto, Canada, assessed the age at which people with diabetes develop a high risk of CVD. The study took in the bulk of the population of Ontario, Canada, consisting of 379,000 people with diabetes and nine million without the disease. Any cardiovascular event, such as a stroke or heart attack, occurring between April 1994 and March 2000 was recorded.

The findings, published today in The Lancet medical journal, clearly show that diabetes led to earlier CVD. Diabetic men and women were about 15 years younger than those without diabetes in the same high risk category.

Rates of fatal and non-fatal heart attacks, strokes, and other CVD events were used to assess risk.

For diabetic men, the change from moderate to high risk took place at about the age of 48. For diabetic women, the switch occurred at 54. When cardiovascular procedures such as bypass surgery were included, the transition took place at age 41 in men and 48 in women with diabetes. "Middle-aged and older people with diabetes seem on average to be at high risk of CVD, thus aggressive risk-reduction strategies are warranted for them," said Dr Booth.

"Appropriate thresholds for younger people with diabetes are less clear. At least in the short term, many individuals with diabetes who are younger than 40 years seem to have a low to moderate absolute risk of CVD. Age should be taken into account in targeting of risk reduction in people with diabetes."

Cathy Ross, cardiac nurse at the British Heart Foundation said: "This research supports existing evidence that diabetes is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. With current trends suggesting that by 2010 there will be nearly 3 million diabetics in the UK, it is never too early to think about your heart health.

"Men with diabetes are two to four times more likely to develop coronary heart disease (CHD) and women three to five times more likely."

She added: "Furthermore, having diabetes can worsen other risk factors associated with CHD such as raised blood pressure, cholesterol and obesity.

"You can reduce your own risk of developing diabetes by maintaining a healthy weight, exercising regularly and limiting the amount of sugar and fat in your diet."

 

Prof Bill Ledger overseaWhy does Britain have record levels of abortion and an unprecedented need for IVF?s abortions AND helps women conceive with IVF. Here, he addresses that very modern contradiction: why does Britain have record levels of abortion along with an unprecedented need for IVF?

Not long ago, a woman of 39 went with her new partner to see leading fertility specialist Professor Bill Ledger at his Sheffield clinic. She was desperate for a baby and distraught that she couldn't conceive when the time was finally right in her own life for a child.

Her situation was all the more distressing because in her early 20s she had terminated an unwanted pregnancy.

Now, because of the declining quality of her eggs, it was almost certainly too late to have the baby she longed for — despite the huge medical advances in IVF techniques.

Overwhelmed with regret over the termination, she asked Professor Ledger: 'Is the abortion the reason why I can't have children now. Was that my one chance to have a child?'

It was not the first and, if current trends continue, will not be the last time he will be asked that question.

'It is a very sad situation. The two are disconnected, medically, but in these women's minds they are very much connected,' says Professor Ledger, 48, head of the Assisted Conception Unit in Sheffield, one of the few NHS-managed fertility clinics in Britain.

'The infertility has nothing to do with the previous abortion. If a termination is carried out in a proper hospital then it should have no effect on future fertility. All you can do is take that woman back to when she made the decision and accept that, at the time, it was the right decision.

'But, my goodness, do they regret having an abortion, especially when they find out later they can't have children. Sometimes it is the most heartbreaking of consultations when in the process of 15 or 20 minutes you can change the way people see the whole picture of their lives.'

Professor Ledger is especially well placed to understand many of the contradictions in modern women's lives because he is one of those rare doctors who specialise in IVF and abortions. Thus, he is in a unique position to understand why there are record levels of abortion in Britain, combined with unprecedented demand for IVF.

He says: 'More and more women are delaying motherhood, but few realise that from the age of 35 egg quality declines quite rapidly. In women over 40 undergoing IVF a live birth happens less than 10 per cent of the time — the remainder either fail to conceive or miscarry — at 42 it's down to less than 5 per cent and at 45 it's less than one per cent.'

That's the nub of a very modern crisis. With the advent of equal opportunities and sexual equality, women — educated for a competitive job market — are increasingly reluctant to sacrifice their hard-won careers, freedom and financial independence for marriage and babies in their 20s.

Statistics

Latest statistics show the highest proportion of Britain's 185,000 abortions last year fell in the 20-30 age group. The average age of all mothers giving birth is now 31 — the highest ever — while the number of women waiting until their 40s to have a baby has gone up 7 per cent in one year and doubled in a decade — to more than 22,000 a year.

There is a certain irony to Professor Ledger's life's work, which could be regarded as a microcosm of this much broader social problem. Each year 1,800 women come to see him at his nonprofit-making clinic — owned and run by Sheffield Teaching Hospital University Trust — in the hope that he can give them a baby.

Some leave eternally grateful for their 'miracle' child, but others cannot be helped. The average age of patients is 34, but increasingly he is seeing women in their late 30s and early 40s, for whom their age is the only reason for infertility.

He rarely sees women in their early 20s, unless they are seeking an abortion. For like almost every obstetrics and gynaecology department in Britain, the hospital where Professor Ledger works sees women at opposite ends of the spectrum — those desperate for a baby and those equally desperate not to be pregnant.

'Personally, I have long accepted the slightly odd nature of what I do. I have worked out a solution which is right for me but might not be for everybody,' says Professor Ledger.

'There are around 185,000 abortions a year in Britain. That is a high level which is a great, great pity, and it shows that we are failing young people on contraception. I'm sure every one of those people is a tragedy writ large. I think these women carry a very huge burden.

'The present situation is the least worst scenario, for it is not the way of a civilised society to make women have babies when they don't want them or don't have the means to bring them up. It is a very courageous thing to have a child on your own and I just can't find myself too critical of women who opt for a termination.

'Of course, the ideal situation is that people receive better access to contraception advice so that they don't get pregnant when they don't want to be.

'But to have an early termination as a day case when you are just a few weeks pregnant, and then go on to have children later, is, in my opinion, an acceptable option.

'From my experience, these women agonise over their decision. It is not a "lifestyle" choice, it is a life-changing one. It's not a case of shrugging their shoulders and thinking: "I'll get rid of it and go to the pub later."

I have seen women whose boyfriends have left them, who are at college and have yet to finish their studies, women who can't afford to bring up a child, women who were taking the Pill but didn't realise that being sick reduced its effectiveness.

'These are women who want children, but not now because they believe the welfare of that child will be compromised. They do think very hard and there is a great sadness. The decision will affect every year they spend on this planet and most do not move on easily.'

Last week, Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt turned down calls from Roman Catholics for the 24-week upper limit on abortions to be lowered, saying that the Government remained neutral on the subject and saw no need to change the law.

While Professor Ledger regards such debate as healthy in a democracy, he believes that most doctors working in this field think the current system works well and that David Steel, who introduced the 1967 Abortion Act, 'pretty much got it right'.

'I remember as a trainee at the Royal Infirmary in Edinburgh being very intrigued by a lovely suite of offices on the top floor overlooking the city,' he says.

'One nurse told me: "Oh yes, that's where all the septic abortions used to go." This whole row of rooms was where the young girls went to die after having back-street abortions. This happened in these nurses' working lifetimes, and if we restricted abortion, these women would return to the backstreets and come back with vile septic infections.

'I don't think myself or many of my colleagues in obstetrics and gynaecology would want to see the law changed. It would be such a retrograde step to see women having to try to find their own solutions again. Nevertheless, it is a very powerful, emotional moment in any woman's life and they go back over it when things later go wrong.'

Indeed, a recent study by researchers at the University of Oslo found that while miscarriage causes the most mental distress in the six months after the loss of a baby, the negative effects of abortion last much longer.

After five years, less than three per cent of women who had miscarried were still suffering distress, while the corresponding figure for women who had undergone an abortion was 20 per cent.

So why are record numbers of women in their 20s — an age when they are biologically and emotionally best suited to having children — undergoing abortions? And why are increasing numbers of women leaving motherhood so late that many will never conceive?

As well as being a moral issue, it is increasingly an economic one.

It is now estimated that one in five women will never give birth, and if current social trends continue, that figure is set to rise.

Already there are fears of a population and pensions crisis, with the Institute for Public Policy Research warning that delayed motherhood is resulting in the loss of 92,000 babies every year — children vital for Britain's future economy.

Fertility penalty

The reason for this, according to the Institute, is the 'fertility penalty'.

An educated woman who has her first baby at 24 will miss out on up to £564,000 in earnings over her lifetime, compared with losing £165,000 if she delays motherhood by just four more years. Those losses must then be set against the £50,000 cost of bringing up a baby.

Most recent statistics reveal that abortions rose 2.1 per cent in one year to 185,400 in 2004, and that it was in the 20-24 age group that the rate was highest — 31.9 per 1,000 women. Meanwhile, the birth rate for women in their 20s has dropped by 25 per cent, with the majority of women now waiting until their 30s.

Professor Ledger says: 'I don't think there are any two women who have a termination for exactly the same reasons. Certainly some of the reasons might be similar, for those women who delay having a child for so long — they can't afford it or they haven't yet met the right partner.

'Many people have the image of the slightly dilettante career woman who decides one day she wants a baby before it's too late, but in fact it's the ordinary folk who are deferring. They look at the cost of rearing a baby and they wait and wait until they have the house and then the car . . . the way we all do. There's always a million reasons to wait another year.

'I would encourage all couples to take one evening to sit down with their favourite drink and have a serious discussion about what they want from their lives and whether they want to wake up one day at 40 to realise they have left it too late to have a baby.

'Many young women these days regard having a baby as a huge financial burden in an already financially overburdened world. They are carrying massive debt and both partners have to work just to pay the mortgage. They regard children as the factor that will break the bank.

'One in three couples in their 20s will conceive within a month of trying and after a year, 95 per cent will have a pregnancy, but few women realise that fertility drops dramatically after the age of 35.

'I have had patients who are doctors themselves but who don't know how poor chances of getting pregnant are after the age of 40.

Recently I had one patient whose mother had gone through an early menopause at 34 and her auntie at 33. And she couldn't work out why her periods had stopped before she'd got round to having children. I have had women in their 50s, angry that they can't have IVF because they didn't realise you have to ovulate to have babies and they don't have any eggs.

'One woman said, when I told her she could not be treated: "You are discriminating against me because of my age." I replied: "It is not me, it is biology that is discriminating against you."

'People have unrealistically high expectations of IVF and think they can simply get a donor egg, but that is not easy in this country.

'People read magazines featuring older celebrities having babies — women who've almost certainly used donor eggs but won't admit it — and they come in with these clippings thinking it's going to be easy. If only we had more celebrities prepared to admit they spent £30,000 on IVF and still don't have a baby.

'In this day and age I think women should start thinking of starting a family at 30, which is old enough for them to have enjoyed some career and financial success, but not too old to conceive.'

As Professor Ledger's clinic is non-profit making, it charges just £2,500 for each IVF cycle. But the cost at some private clinics can be three times as much — which is why he believes that fertility treatment should be made freely available for all.

At a fertility conference in Prague last week, he argued that an investment by the government of £50million to £80million would prove 'cost-effective' by increasing the population by 10,000 within two to three years. However, he concedes that the best scenario would always be to encourage women to conceive naturally younger.

Josephine Quintavalle, founder of CORE (Comment on Reproductive Ethics), believes such arguments reveal how skewed our attitude to reproduction has become.

'Professor Ledger calculates that an average person contributes more than £160,000 to the economy over their lifetime, more than recouping the £12,931 cost spent on IVF,' she says.

Highest abortion rate

Well, if you take those statistics, it doesn't take a genius to work out that the 185,000 foetuses which are aborted each year would — if they'd been born — contribute almost £30 billion to the economy, so perhaps the investment would be better placed elsewhere,' she adds.

'We have to ask ourselves why Britain has the highest abortion rate in Europe and has now even overtaken America per 1,000 population. These are all countries where there is abortion on demand, and yet fewer women there take that option.

'What we need to look at is the lack of support for young women who find themselves pregnant.

'If you have a patriarchal society where women have to behave like men to get up the career ladder, then women will not have children. And they will want them even less if they know they will have to leave them in day care centres and hardly ever see them.'

Leading academic and labour market expert Professor Alison Wolf, of King's College, London, believes that only a radical shift in government policies — making it more financially attractive for young career women to have babies — will avert a population crisis.

'If the current trend continues, we are going to end up with a very high proportion of today's most educated women failing to reproduce and that is going to have a very profound effect on society, for it is parents far more than schools that educate our children.

'Quite simply, more women would have children and stay at home with them if it was affordable. Children are seen as a net burden, so if people are having fewer children then we have to make it more financially attractive.

'Women give up so much when they have babies — their careers and their future earnings,' says Professor Wolf, who believes Britain should look at offering cash bonuses and tax breaks to women for having children.

'The time of reckoning will come when there are not enough educated workers and there are a large number of elderly people with no family to look after them. It will probably have to get to crisis point before anyone does anything about it.

'I think young people view their options very rationally. It's not a question of their making wrong choices, they are making sensible ones in the circumstances. So if as a society we are worried about the consequences, then we have to change the options instead of preaching at women.'

It's a point Josephine Quintavalle agrees with — that in this country there must be a paradigm shift in thinking about women and careers if we are to avert a crisis.

'If you have a society where there are record levels of abortion among women who are most fertile, and unprecedented demand for IVF from women who have delayed motherhood for economic or lifestyle reasons, you have to think that something isn't working.'

7 people have commented on this story so far. Tell us what you think below.

Here's a sample of the latest comments published. You can click view all to read all comments that readers have sent in.

Just another bend on the highway of evolution. Those with the sense and resources to procreate before their eggs are rendered void by nature will ensure the survival of their line and those that place the pursuit of wealth and independence before securing the future of their genes will be omitted from the pool. Society has created an imbalance by a blurring boundaries and I suggest this is simply nature's correction. Nothing alarming in the article, we have turned life into a commodity, so why shouldn't it be traded like one?

- Mickey Blue, England

Took the words out of my mouth. I'm nearing my late 20s and have always wanted children. Problem is, the boys in their late 20s/even early 30s (I will not call all of them MEN) they don't even want a girlfriend, let alone be a husband and father! Same situation on this side of the pond.

- Diane, Washington, DC, USA

Rational and wise words from Janet Thomas of Cardiff. There is always something to wait for and putting off having children to attain these materialistic wishes has a very high price, namely, no children at all. I had my children very young and have no regrets whatsoever. It cost me good career and earnings for the nine years I was at home raising them. It was worth every minute. Many years on, I acquired some of the material things I always wanted to own, but curiously I find myself back to basics. I'll never own a house, have two cars , have a wall size TV screen and don''t have an electric mixer. My greatest joys in life are my family and grandchildren.

- Philippa Heitmann, Isleworth, UK

 

Obesity pill to be made available on NHS

A groundbreaking once-a-day pill is set to revolutionise the fight against obesity.

The drug called Acomplia can cut bodyweight by up to 10 per cent in a year and significantly reduce the risk of heart disease and diabetes.

The pill is the first to stop people eating by interfering with a part of the brain involved in cravings.

British patients will be the first in the world to benefit from it following its UK launch yesterday.

Experts say the £2-a-day pill will be a valuable tool to help tackle soaring rates of obesity by reducing people's desire to overeat and targeting dangerous abdominal fat.

But there will be concerns about the 'medicalisation' of obesity and whether patients will consider the drug an easy way to slim.

There are also fears that some people who are underweight or anorexic may try to obtain it illegally on the blackmarket without prescription.

Acomplia, also known as rimonabant, is licensed for people who are medically classed as obese - around 10million people in the UK.

The drug will also be given to people who are overweight, but already have type 2 diabetes or diagnosed cholesterol problems.

In Britain it is estimated more than two million people have type 2 diabetes.

It is available only on prescription from today and costs £55.20 for a month's supply.

In all cases people must have already tried diet and exercise to shed excess weight before getting the drug and continue with such efforts while on the pill.

In trials when overweight people took a daily 20 mg pill, up to 40 per cent of them lost 10 per cent of their body weight, much of it from around their waist.

The drug also boosted levels of protective good cholesterol, while lowering harmful blood fats, and helped diabetics improve control of their blood sugar levels.

The pill works by interfering with a system in the body that controls energy levels, regulates body weight plus breaks down sugars and fats.

When people regularly eat too much the system goes into overdrive and this encourage the body to store more fat, especially around the stomach.

The pill blocks a key part of the system, reducing the cravings for food and helping prevent fat being deposited.

According to the makers French firm Sanofi-Aventis, the benefits do not just come from the weight loss.

This is because the pill targets fat around the waist, which is known to particularly raise the risk of diabetes and heart problems.

Henry Purcell, head of obesity research at the Royal Brompton Hospital in London, warned that obesity levels in Britain are now at epidemic proportions with rates among adults having doubled since the 1980s.

Dr David Haslam, clinical director of the National Obesity Forum, said: 'We have a very limited opportunity to do something about the problem of obesity before it is too late.

'Obesity is not a cosmetic or social issue but a serious medical one.

'A drug that can tackle each individual risk factor not just weight is potentially a very valuable tool.'

Some fear there could be delays getting the drug on the NHS because it has not yet been assessed by rationing watchdogs.

It has not yet been considered by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE).

It can take 18 months for the watchdogs to issue guidance on use of a new medicine.

And some fear cash-strapped primary care trusts may be reluctant to fund the drug until this is completed.

Professor Anthony Barnett, professor of medicine at the University of Birmingham, said: 'Primary Care Trusts often wait for Nice guidance.

'There is a very distinct possibility that there will be some limitations on its use, which I think will be a very great shame.

'The real question is, can we afford not to treat obesity?'

A spokesman for NICE said drugs have to be referred to it by the Department of Health and it had not yet been asked to consider Acomplia.

A Department of Health spokeswoman said lack of NICE guidance should not be used as a reason to withhold drugs.

But she added the Government was considering referring Acomplia to NICE and an announcement is expected shortly.

Some have predicted the pill could generate worldwide sales in excess of £3billion.

It was given official European Union marketing approval last week but did not go on sale straight away.

The UK is the first place in the world where it is being launched with roll outs expected across Europe later this year.

The company also hopes to sell it in the USA once it wins approval from American licensing authorities.

As with any drug there are fears that once available, it could be traded on the blackmarket.

It could then be abused by anorexics or those who are not overweight but simply want to shed a few pounds.

A company spokesman insisted it was not being tested on such groups, it was only licensed for patients who were overweight or obese and it would be unlikely to benefit those without weight problems.

In one early trial the pill was also found the double the success rate of smokers trying to quit.

However a second study failed to show any significant effects and so the company is not now marketing it as an anti-smoking aid.

30 people have commented on this story so far. Tell us what you think below.

Here's a sample of the latest comments published. You can click view all to read all comments that readers have sent in.

After years of yo-yo dieting after having babies, I am really struggling to lose the extra one stone I am carrying.
Anything that helps speed-up weightloss, alongside exercise and diet should be welcomed.
Weight problems take over your thoughts day and night, you can never escape food.

- Amy Gasnier, Winchester

I would welcome a drug that genuinely works. I was 13 stone when I started with high blood pressure. After 18 years on Atenolol, I developed diabetes, and despite a healthy eating regime, I put on 3 stone in weight over the years. Diets work only temporarily. I have tried other medication and had little success with weight loss. I hope that my doctors will prescribe Acomplia for me as the upward spiralling of my weight is now getting out of hand and scaring me to death. I do not over eat. None of my family is overweight, neither my parents nor my siblings nor my husband or my children are fat. I hope that this new drug is successful and will help many people to control their eating habits so that they will not contract other weight related illnesses.

- Mrs F Rashid, Manchester. Englnd

It's called will power folks, we all have it we just need to be strong enough to use it.

- Steve Webster, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

 
 
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