borofergie
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borofergie said:AMBrennan said:TL;DR: The decision about which medical interventions should be financed should be made by experts in the relevant field (which we are not) who are familiar with the relevant research (which we are not) and thus able to make an informed decision (which we are not).
The same experts who think that we should eat a 50% carbohydrate diet, or different ones?
AMBrennan said:I have not signed it and will not sign it, for a very simple reason: This kind of thing should not be decided by popularity contest nor politicians (ultimately a popularity contest again). Just look at airport security theatre to see what happens when you get this wrong - after 9/11 everyone was screaming at the government to do something about the threat. As a result, they put in place a system of ludicrously expensive and almost certainly completely ineffective defences - what made the attacks so devastating was that they were unexpected, so the solution would have to try and guard against the unexpected rather than the specific thing the bad guys did last time.
NHS funds are finite, so whilst you can (depending on your financial circumstances) spend a lot on unproven treatments that you personally believe in, you cannot ask the NHS to pay for all of them. At the end of the day, every pound spend on diabetes care means that there's a pound less available for helping the babies with cancer.
Personally, I am a T1 patient so I get all the test strips on prescription but spend another £8 per day on CGM. Do I think that it helps me? Yes, sure, otherwise I wouldn't continue to pay for it? Would it be nice if the NHS paid for it? Well, of course. Do I, rationally, have any reason to think that it does anything? No, none whatsoever. As a result, asking the NHS to pay for it is wrong.
My understanding is that there is no evidence showing that testing is effective in T2. If that's incorrect, then give me a study and send a copy to NICE as well. They are not stupid, and they're not trying to kill us. I'm sure that there's ample funding available - all the big players have already developed products, and conclusive proof that every T2 patients needs to test 4x a day would instantly increase demand tenfold.
And please don't try appealing to my common sense and telling me that you can't know if your treatment is working without testing - that's an argument from theory, which is a bad. Textbook biochemistry is an excellent tool for producing hypotheses worth testing but not sufficient on it's own. If you want to have some fun, go look at any nutritional supplements. For example, Diabetone (IIRC this is the most popular product around here) has " These include L- Carnitine, Vitamin B1 (Thiamin), plus B6 and C, which are important factors in glucose metabolism.". That's an argument from theory, and entirely true - the important thing they're not saying is that this will *do* anything, because their own research shows that it doesn't do anything.
TL;DR: The decision about which medical interventions should be financed should be made by experts in the relevant field (which we are not) who are familiar with the relevant research (which we are not) and thus able to make an informed decision (which we are not).
I quite agree, but the problem is that it is and it will be. Healthcare funding is hopelessly bound up with politics, and with posturing towards supposed public opinion. It is already deeply compromised and distorted, and all diabetics may suffer as a consequence -- that is the point, and that is why patients have to look to play a public role. The point about our emphasis on proper education is that this is not inherently a funding issue.AMBrennan said:This kind of thing should not be decided by popularity contest nor politicians (ultimately a popularity contest again).
every pound spend on diabetes care means that there's a pound less available for helping the babies with cancer"
AMBrennan said:At the end of the day, every pound spend on diabetes care means that there's a pound less available for helping the babies with cancer.
AMBrennan said:Personally, I am a T1 patient so I get all the test strips on prescription but spend another £8 per day on CGM.
Well here's one of many you can find if you look. I found it within 30 seconds of doing a g**gle search. Not only shows it works but shows it saves money tooAMBrennan said:My understanding is that there is no evidence showing that testing is effective in T2.
AMBrennan said:TL;DR: The decision about which medical interventions should be financed should be made by experts in the relevant field (which we are not) who are familiar with the relevant research (which we are not) and thus able to make an informed decision (which we are not).
Thanks Xyzzy could not have put it better myself, Just proves what my comments said earlier. Unbelievable.xyzzy said:AMBrennan said:At the end of the day, every pound spend on diabetes care means that there's a pound less available for helping the babies with cancer.
Those poor babies didn't seem to worry you when you cost the NHS around £3000 for the pump and probably an ongoing £1000+ a year on its consumables. Presumably you could of remained just injecting the old fashioned way? Mind you I don't begrudge you a penny of it as they are excellent devices.
AMBrennan said:Personally, I am a T1 patient so I get all the test strips on prescription but spend another £8 per day on CGM.
Nice you can afford to self finance just under £3000 a year. There are many T2's who post on this forum who can't afford to self finance even one test strip a day. Realise that's not your problem and you've made it clear you don't give a **** but just saying...
Well here's one of many you can find if you look. I found it within 30 seconds of doing a g**gle search. Not only shows it works but shows it saves money tooAMBrennan said:My understanding is that there is no evidence showing that testing is effective in T2.
A summary can be read here http://www.medicine.ox.ac.uk/bandolier/band148/b148-3.html
The study can be downloaded here http://www.journalofdst.org/September2007/pdf/VOL-1-5-ORG1-WEBER.pdf
Just one of many you can find if you can be bothered enough to look and don't just get brainwashed by the NICE or NHS line. In any event the e-petition does not state that all T2's should be given T2's as it effectively states only those where it is shown to be helpful or words to that effect. Again quite easy to spot if you hadn't have exhibited that so amusing TLDR attitude.
Let's also remind ourselves of what it does cost the NHS in terms of uncontrolled diabetic complications.
"NHS Payment by Results 2010-11 National Tariff Information" http://data.gov.uk/dataset/payment-by-results-2010-11-national-tariff-information
Amputation £3661
Cardiac Arrest £1645
Hyperglycemia £2221
Hypoglycemia £2168
Lower Limb Complication £2475
Stroke approx £3000
AMBrennan said:TL;DR: The decision about which medical interventions should be financed should be made by experts in the relevant field (which we are not) who are familiar with the relevant research (which we are not) and thus able to make an informed decision (which we are not).
What a sad grey drab view of life you have. If everyone had such a blinkered and naive view as that nothing would ever change.
jopar said:They have done trails to evaluate the effectiveness of testing/education for T2's hence why the present stand on Test Strips, the one carried out in the 2000 showed no significant difference in outcomes for the two groups!
Jopar wrote:
Plough all your money into low carb education, you end up with not a lot of difference and 52% who can't adhered to it.
Well the NHS has had a fine amount of my money over my 37 years of working to date, That bull was the same rubbish that My Doctor came out with. OK let me opt out and put my NI on my own medical Insurance.jopar said:As already said, the NHS has only a finite amount of money that he can spend on patients, whatever their medical need is and it means for some people decisions to what and how the money is spent isn't what they hoped for, but take a look at other countries and their medical systems, which are built purely on 'Do you' the individual have the money! Take America for an example what depicts the diabetic treatment they receive? A Insurance company looking to make a profit and the money you have in your pocket! You either got to pay in full or foot part of the bill at the sources of service! No insulin, tablets or test strips ect even with medical insurance if you don't have the money in your pocket to pay your part of the bill!
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