The graphs in the reports also show the percentages with less than 6.5% and the Welsh figures are divided into age groups.In 2007-2008 91 per cent of the records included an HbA1c measurement. In just over 60 per cent of the records HbA1c was ≤7.5 per centThus almost 40 per cent of people with diabetes have an HbA1c value in the increased risk range (>7.5 per cent) and 7.6 per cent had a very high risk HbA1c of >10 per cent.
Two thirds (66.59 per cent) of people with Type 2 diabetes but only one third (29.71 per cent) of people with Type 1 diabetes achieved the NICE recommended HbA1c target of ≤7.5 per cent.
Following the same trend as the previous audit year the achievement of the NICE HbA1c measurement of ≤7.5 per cent is higher in the older age bands peaking at 77 per cent in the 85+ year age band.
Edwardia said:Just wanted to mention the ACCORD study in the US. Studied more than 10,000 ppl.
Intensive insulin therapy for T2 was deemed to be Hb1Ac <6% and normal T2 insulin therapy 7 to 7.9%. Over the life of the study 203 of the T2 7 to 7.9% ppl died and 257 of the T2 < 6% ppl. Over 50% of the excess deaths (as they phrased it) were from heart disease. The intensive insulin therapy part of the study was therefore stopped in Feb 2008
Data from the ADVANCE Study, involving 11,140 high-risk patients with type 2 diabetes, provides no evidence of an increased risk of death among those patients receiving aggressive treatment to lower blood glucose.
kay957 said:Mine is currently 7.1 is that ok or bad? the doctors tell me nothing :roll:
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