|
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
|
Item #5
National
10-Year Diabetes Plan Launched
The UK
government last week a new 10-year strategy to tackle diabetes,
which includes a promise that by 2007 all diabetics will have eye
screening to prevent complications that can lead to blindness.
The diabetes
national service framework (NSF), which sets out national
standards and performance targets for diabetes care, was widely
welcomed by patient lobbyists and doctors and nurses.
Around 1.4 million
people in the UK have diagnosed diabetes and another million are
thought to have the condition but do not realize it. It is the
leading cause of blindness in the UK and it increases the risk of
heart disease, kidney failure, amputations and strokes.
The charity Diabetes
UK estimates that the health service spends about £5.2bn a year,
9% of the 2000 NHS budget, fighting diabetes and its
complications, including heart, kidney and eye disease, strokes
and foot problems.
The framework says
that by 2006 every person with diabetes, or at risk of developing
it, will be offered regular check ups and appropriate treatment by
doctors, nurses, and other health professionals to ensure
complications are spotted early.
A national clinical
director for diabetes will be appointed to oversee the strategy.
The health
secretary, Alan Milburn said "We chose diabetes as a NSF
because we are determined to improve the quality of care for
people with diabetes regardless of where they live or who they
are. Our goal is to make the best practice already offered in some
places the norm."
The deputy prime
minister, John Prescott, who is a diabetic, said: " Most of
the time I manage my diabetes myself - like others. The NSF's
effectiveness lies in its recognition of this and its commitment
to providing patients with the tools they need to manage their own
condition."
Professor David
Haslam, chair of council of the Royal College of GPs, said:
"I was extremely pleased to see the diabetes NSF framework
focus on patient empowerment, cultural sensitivity, the importance
of community based care, and the value of multi-disciplinary,
team-based care.
"I was also
particularly encouraged that the framework gives a very clear
recognition that an adequate workforce and level of resource is
essential if there are to be significant changes in the standard
of care”. There
are 1.3 million people with diagnosed diabetes in England.
Key
elements of the delivery strategy include:
-
by 2007, every
Primary Care Trust will provide eye screening services for all
people with diabetes. This will prevent as many as 1,000
people a year from going blind or having their sight impaired;
-
by 2006 every
person with diabetes, or at risk of developing the disease,
will be offered regular check-ups and appropriate treatment to
ensure any complications are picked up quickly;
-
local diabetes
networks that will include people with diabetes who will
champion the views of people affected by this disease and help
to set local services and priorities; and
-
local and
national audits to ensure standards are being maintained.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
|
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
|