Type 2 diabetes
Type 2 diabetes is high blood sugar levels due to your body not making enough of a hormone called insulin, or the insulin it makes not working properly — known as insulin resistance.
High blood sugar levels over time can cause other health problems like heart attacks and strokes, as well as problems with your eyes, kidneys, and feet. These are called diabetes complications.
So treatment includes regular health checks and getting support to be active, eat healthily, and maintain a healthy weight. You may need to take medication including insulin and check your blood sugars regularly too.
Type 2 diabetes can go undiagnosed for years if you don’t have symptoms or your symptoms are missed.
It doesn't just affect people living with overweight or obesity, although this is one of the risk factors, along with ethnicity.
There are many reasons type 2 diabetes develops but it mostly affects people over 25 often with a family history.
Many people can do things to try and prevent type 2 diabetes.
There’s no cure but some people with type 2 diabetes can put their diabetes into remission.
For a version of our What is type 2 diabetes? video in Gujarati, Punjabi, Sylheti or Urdu, go to our YouTube playlist
Diabetes information in other languages
What are the differences between type 1 and type 2 diabetes?
Find out the symptoms of type 2 diabetes
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Type 2 diabetes treatments
Type 2 diabetes remission
Young people and type 2 diabetes
What's it like living with type 2 diabetes?
Watch Gina's story on YouTube