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HealthInfo Aoraki South Canterbury

Diabetes in children & teens

Mate huka ki ngā tamariki me rangatahi

Diabetes, sometimes called diabetes mellitus, is a lifelong disease that causes high glucose (a kind of sugar) in your blood.

When you eat foods containing carbohydrates (such as bread, cereal, fruit and some vegetables), your body turns them into glucose. Your body needs insulin to move glucose out of your blood and into your muscle and fat cells.

Insulin is a hormone you make in your pancreas – a gland below your stomach.

You get type 1 diabetes if your body doesn't make enough insulin. This is the most common form of diabetes in tamariki (children) and teens. Health professionals do not fully understand what causes type 1 diabetes but it's a mix of genetic factors (passed down from parents) and a trigger in the environment such as a viral infection. It isn't related to what a tamaiti (child) eats.

You get type 2 diabetes if your body cannot use insulin properly. Risk factors for getting type 2 diabetes include being overweight and having a whānau (family) history of diabetes.

Symptoms of diabetes

The main symptoms of diabetes include:

Diagnosing diabetes

Your doctor will usually diagnose diabetes using blood tests, including finger-prick tests for blood glucose.

Treating diabetes

For type 1 diabetes, the treatment is the hormone insulin, combined with managing what you eat and physical activity. Insulin is usually injected into your body and you learn to do this yourself.

You may be able to manage type 2 diabetes by losing weight, healthy eating and physical activity. Sometimes you may also need tablets and insulin.

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Written by HealthInfo clinical advisers. Last reviewed November 2022.

Sources

See also:

Diabetes

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Review key: HIDIA-21832