Poor standard of diabetes care given to under 40s

DCUK NewsBot

Well-Known Member
Messages
4,059
Adults under the age of 40 are receiving a low standard of care according to findings from the National Diabetes Audit. People with type 1 diabetes are facing particularly poor care in terms of complications screening with fewer than 3 in 10 of under 40 year olds receiving 8 of the 9 essential healthcare checks. Under 40 year olds with type 2 diabetes are not faring that much better with less than half receiving 8 of the 9 checks. It is a worry that essential screening is not being carried out, meaning that many young people may be blindly heading towards diabetes complications. The situation is not helped by the fact that many people under 40 are struggling to control their blood sugar levels. 22% of people with type 1 diabetes under 40 years old have an HbA1c over 86 mmol/mol (10%). For people under 40 with type 2 diabetes, 16% have an HbA1c over 86 mmol/mol (10%). Diabetes UK's Chief Executive, Barbara Young has responded to the findings, saying: "It is deeply worrying that young adults with diabetes are less likely to get their annual health checks and also less likely to have their condition under control. While it is right that the NHS has focused on older people with multiple conditions over the last few years, we fear that care for younger people and those of working age with diabetes is being left behind." If you are not receiving the complications screening tests you should be or are not being told what the results of these tests are, ask your doctor or consultant to address the issue. You should also be told your HbA1c results and, if they are higher than the recommended levels, you be given advice on how to bring your blood glucose levels under stronger control.

Continue reading...
 

donnellysdogs

Master
Messages
13,233
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Pump
Dislikes
People that can't listen to other people's opinions.
People that can't say sorry.
This week a surgeon I work for says he cannot remember a single diabetic that he has operated on with an hba1c under 9.0....

Perhaps though from listening to Patients at my Practice... They don't always take in specimen tests, they miss the feet check ups... So are those patients being classified as ones not getting their full tests, when they failed to go etc... Not the GP's as they do send out letters for everything...

Speaking to three type 2's today, they didn't test and didn't want to either. All 3 were there for blood tests but had failed to take in their specimens as they 'forgot' ......

I am not an NHS person, but part of what I am busy with is talking to Patients about their satisfaction regarding our Practice, and so often we end up talking and laughing etc. It just seems that yes, some of our NHS fail, but so too do Patients.

We have quite a few people that come on to this forum saying that they had given up for a while but want to take control now, as well as people fed up that they aren't getting the expected standards of care. Does everybody then get categorised in to the NHS failing group, do they take in to account the Patients that fail to attend their checkups or get their specimens taken in etc.
 

donnellysdogs

Master
Messages
13,233
Type of diabetes
Type 1
Treatment type
Pump
Dislikes
People that can't listen to other people's opinions.
People that can't say sorry.
How are they going to address these issues... It's ok saying they got statistics again! What is going to change to get people interested in their health before they feel bad, end up in A&E and hospital as an unplanned admission?