According to a study at Kaiser Permanente and the University of California, San Francisco, people with diabetes who have a lower level of health literacy face a greater risk of developing hypoglycaemia and low blood sugar levels .
The research team studied over 14,000 adults with diabetes as part of the Diabetes Study of Northern California (DISTANCE.) This is the largest study to observe hypoglycaemia in the United States, and relied on self-reported hypoglycaemia.
Dr. Urmimala Sarkar, the lead author of the study, reportedly commented: "The frequency of significant hypoglycemia suggests that more surveillance and monitoring are needed. Physicians need to ask diabetes patients about hypoglycemia symptoms at every visit. Our results also highlight the need to be careful about performance standards for glucose control in diabetes. There may be unintended consequences, like significant hypoglycemia, in trying to achieve strict glucose control for all diabetes patients ."
Limited health literacy increases diabetes management risks
Wed, 19 May 2010
Recommended links
Diabetes forumDiabetes donate
Diabetes professionals
Diabetes food and recipes
The Diet Plate helps to control diabetes
Diabetes.co.uk ID alert wristband
Diabetes, pensions annuities
Minority health event focuses on diabetes
24 hour Diabetes drug Victoza approved for National Health Service use
Health in Northern Ireland better but obesity and diabetes rising
Healthy lifestyle can avoid diabetes for a decade
Obesity, diabetes and mental health linked
Department of health audit for diabetes patients
People with diabetes missing health checks
Diabetes leap linked to unhealthy living
Health PR firm will handle diabetes drug
Further reports of health service diabetes failures
Government health profile indicates increases in diabetes
Diabetes program calls for healthy eating in Hispanic community





Join us