Half the world population could be diabetic or insulin resistant by 2050
- 1.3 billion people are projected to have diabetes in the middle of the century. That number of hits is 5 billion, when initial diabetics are includedA number of artificial intelligence now allows people to know about their food and their potential blood sugar response to it. It will soon allow them to predict which diseases they will later face and take early action to avoid them.
Artificial intelligence will play a more important role in preventing and treating diabetes, especially in regions of diabetic populations, such as the Middle East. FortuneThe most powerful women’s international conference In Riyadh.
“The numbers are shocking. We are going to have 1.3 billion people [around the globe] By 2050 diabetes and about three times that number will have preliminary diabetes. […] More than 5 billion people or half of the world’s population will be insulin resistance, “said Noveen Hasemni, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of the Ministry of Emergency Situations, and to give individual nourishment and blood sugar levels.
“The good news is that we have all the tools we need today to help the world become metabolically healthy,” shows users, describing it.
Olfat Bero, the head of the Middle East Rochi Pharmaceutical Middle East, said that in the future AI was fed by genomic profiling data, it would allow many more diseases to be diagnosed and even prevented people with diabetes.
“We see the consequences of this epidemic on other health factors, such as vision and challenges that may later face patients,” said Bernon. “And one very important side … Can we use technology to really understand what changes are, for example, we can predict what we can do?”
To build his blood sugar monitoring program, Hashimi said that according to more personalized data for one person, combining genomic data, lifestyle information and health measurements can effectively “predict your future.”
Like AI Health Monitoring Arrival, and the information provided can help prevent the future in which half of the world’s population is diabetic or preliminary diabetic, offered Leah Cotterill, Helmet Health and African Executive Director (Out of Saudi Arabia).
“One would hope for education and fabulous AI tools and pharmaceuticals, you will be able to combine that curve, not to see that climbing,” he said.
This story was originally shown Fortune.com