cc Sir David Nicholson
Human Costs
The extent of the human costs of the NHS diabetes
policy is tabulated in the following table extracted from:
Complication
|
Number of people with diabetes experiencing the complication
|
Angina
|
117,278
|
Myocardial Infarction
|
28,812
|
Heart Failure
|
81,452
|
Stroke
|
35,120
|
Major Amputation
|
3,319
|
Minor Amputation
|
5,869
|
RRT
|
15,415
|
Retinopathy Treatment
|
14,144
|
DKA
|
10,434
|
Financial Costs
The extent of the financial costs of the NHS
diabetes policy is extracted from:
Diabetes cost approximately £23.7bn in the UK in 2010/2011: £9.8bn in direct costs and £13.9bn
in indirect costs. Direct costs include the costs of diagnosis and retinopathy
screening, treatment and management and complications
(the cost of complications was estimated at £7.7bn - .79% of direct costs).
The indirect costs include mortality costs, productivity loss costs, and social
costs for care. Diabetes currently accounts for 10% of the total health resource expenditure.
Conclusions
“Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes are prominent diseases
in the UK and are a significant economic burden. … Complications related to the
diseases account for a substantial proportion of the direct health costs. As prevalence increases, the cost of treating
complications will grow if current care regimes are maintained”. [My bold]
John
4 comments:
Should this not be offset by the earlier deaths caused by diabetes and therefore saving a small fortune in pensions and care of the elderly?
Andy12345
Andy12345 said...
Should this not be offset by the earlier deaths caused by diabetes and therefore saving a small fortune in pensions and care of the elderly?
Could be why we are prescribed a low fat high carb diet Andy, short term it may be expensive but in the long term the saving on pensions, care and benefits will be more than adequate to cover the initial costs.
Cheers
Graham
Sad but true. I've thought for some time that statins are the anti-pension drug.
It's a mad sad world
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