(HealthDay News) -- Living a healthy lifestyle can cut your risk of  diabetes by as much as 80 percent, researchers from the U.S. National  Institutes of Health report.
It has been clear that diet,  exercise, smoking and drinking have an impact on whether one is likely  to develop type 2 diabetes, but how each individual factor affects the  risk had been unclear.
"The lifestyle factors we looked at were  physical activity, healthy diet, body weight, alcohol consumption and  smoking," said lead researcher Jarad Reis, a researcher from the U.S.  Division of Cardiovascular Sciences at the National Heart, Lung, and  Blood Institute.
"For each one of those, there was a significant  reduction in risk for developing diabetes," he said. "Having a normal  weight by itself reduced the risk of developing diabetes by 60 to 70  percent."
For example, eating a healthy diet reduced the risk by  about 15 percent, while not smoking lowered the risk by about 20  percent, he said. Read more...
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