LittleSue
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 647
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Pump
Random thoughts (too little work today).
At the (hospital) diabetic clinic they've started measuring everyone's "waist" (measured around bottom of rib cage). I've seen the notice pinned up for staff, it applies to ALL patients in that clinic. The measurement also goes on the clinic letter to the patient's GP.
I note recent publicity about large waist size being a risk factor for T2 and the ideas about apple-shaped bodies being worse than pear-shaped, but I struggle to understand the reason for measuring this in diabetic clinic. What will be gained from it? Will they start asking my bra cup size next?
I've been T1 for 35 years. OK my current waist size is bigger than at diagnosis and I've gained weight since. So what - I was 8 and weighed less than 3 stones.
OK maybe they'll ignore T1 data. But measuring people attending diabetic clinic gives skewed data as most of them are already diabetic (assuming they don't get carried away and measure accompanying relatives as well).
Expect the headlines in the Daily Mail - shock hospital study finds 100% of people with big waists are diabetic!
Will GPs now get extra cash for the %age of patients with small waists???
Sue
At the (hospital) diabetic clinic they've started measuring everyone's "waist" (measured around bottom of rib cage). I've seen the notice pinned up for staff, it applies to ALL patients in that clinic. The measurement also goes on the clinic letter to the patient's GP.
I note recent publicity about large waist size being a risk factor for T2 and the ideas about apple-shaped bodies being worse than pear-shaped, but I struggle to understand the reason for measuring this in diabetic clinic. What will be gained from it? Will they start asking my bra cup size next?
I've been T1 for 35 years. OK my current waist size is bigger than at diagnosis and I've gained weight since. So what - I was 8 and weighed less than 3 stones.
OK maybe they'll ignore T1 data. But measuring people attending diabetic clinic gives skewed data as most of them are already diabetic (assuming they don't get carried away and measure accompanying relatives as well).
Expect the headlines in the Daily Mail - shock hospital study finds 100% of people with big waists are diabetic!
Will GPs now get extra cash for the %age of patients with small waists???
Sue