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Tuesday, 2 April 2013

Ministers urged to improve diabetes checks !


One in five people with diabetes are meeting targets to keep their condition under control, a charity has warned.
Just 20% of people in England and Wales hit the recommended levels for blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar, figures from Diabetes UK suggest.
It wants more people to get the recommended annual checks and action taken against parts of the NHS with the worst record.
The Department of Health said it wants to improve diabetes services.
The charity obtained the figures by analysing data from the National Diabetes Audit.
It showed that for type 1 diabetes, just 11% of people meet the targets which help prevent the risk of complications.
High blood pressure, cholesterol and blood sugar suggest the patient's diabetes is not well controlled and can lead to complications such as kidney failure and stroke.
The charity also said it goes a long way to explaining why 24,000 people with diabetes die early every year in England and Wales.
Annual checks
Currently only 54% of people with diabetes in England get the nine annual checks recommended nationally to prevent future problems.
As well as calling for more patients to receive this annual review, Diabetes UK said it wanted the government to hold poor performing areas to account because in some places fewer than 20% of people with the condition were getting the checks.
Care needs to improve to cope with the increasing numbers of people living with diabetes, the charity said.
It is estimated that the NHS spends about £10bn a year on diabetes - 10% of its entire budget - and about 80% of this goes on treating complications that could often have been prevented.
There are currently around three million people diagnosed with the disease.
Barbara Young, chief executive of Diabetes UK, said: "Given that diabetes is serious and can lead to early death if not supported to manage their condition, it is extremely worrying that so few people have it under control.
"The high rate of preventable complications is the inevitable consequence of a healthcare system that has all too often not been good enough and this highlights the need for local services to put in place self-management support programmes to help people manage their diabetes well.
"At the moment there is virtually no access to the ongoing education and support to help people manage their diabetes and so help avoid complications reduce their chance of early death."
A spokesperson from the Department of Health said: "We are determined to improve NHS services across the country for people with diabetes and end the unacceptable variation in care that still exists.
"We have set clear objectives for the NHS to improve the care and management of people with diabetes and we will be monitoring NHS England to make sure this is delivered."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-21967936

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

It is commendable that the Dept of Health are 'determined to improve NHS services' but with the advice still being given out to diabetics that it is ok to keep eating carbohydrates with every meal and diabetes uk being one of the offenders I'm not at all sure that people living with diabetes and not having good control of their glucose numbers will ever see an improvement.
Yes, it is important that all diabetics should have access to regular tests and checks but it is also important that everyone acts upon the results and that still isn't happening.

Jean

Galina L. said...

Usually, nothing gets changed until the real trouble takes place. The situation with diabetes at least in England looks like changes are commimng

Anonymous said...

But if diabetics get more 'support' from the 'experts', they'll end up in even worse shape!

Lowcarb team member said...

Hi Galina

While any improvement in diabetes care is welcome we will still have the very same dietary advice that does nothing to help control blood sugar levels. The NHS still recommends that 33% should come from starchy carbs.

Carole's right in what she says, the experts will still push the diet that can lead to poor blood sugar control.

Graham

Galina L. said...

It looks like that only complete disaster will wake the health officials up,logic doesn't work, and the situation is almost disastrous.