Insulin is not a cure, either. If you think that it is as simple as taking insulin you are undereducated about diabetes. I am a Type 1 diabetic, as was my brother before his passing at the age of 42 due to complications of diabetes.
A few facts about diabetes.
- Approximately 3 million Americans have T1 diabetes
- Diabetes currently affects more than 371 million people worldwide and is expected to affect 552 million by 2030
- In Africa, 76% of death due to diabetes are in adults aged under 60 years
- Diabetes caused 5.1 million deaths in 2013, worldwide
- 50% of people with diabetes die of cardiovascular disease (primarily heart disease and stroke)
- T1D accounts for $14.9 billion in healthcare costs in the U.S. each year
- Approximately 80 people per day (29,000 per year) —are diagnosed with T1D in the U.S.
- While insulin injections or infusion allow a person with T1D to stay alive, they do not cure the disease, nor do they necessarily prevent the possibility of the disease’s serious effects, which may include: kidney failure, blindness, nerve damage, heart attack, stroke, and pregnancy complication
I am not saying that ALS is not worthy of attention and fundraising, but it just seems odd how so many people are enticed to dump buckets of water on their heads for a disease that affects so few, compared to other diseases for which they probably have never done a thing to help find a cure.