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Alarming figures show massive scale of hidden diabetes cases


Thousands of people in the Bradford district are sitting on a diabetes timebomb, “alarming” new figures have revealed.

Diabetes Health Intelligence, a strategic programme of Yorkshire and Humber Public Health Observatory, now estimates 7,400 people in the district are living with Type 2 diabetes – and don’t even know it.

The study says people with the undiagnosed illness are putting themselves at serious risk of devastating complications, such as blindness, amputation, kidney failure, stroke and heart disease.

Health bosses have now totally revamped their approach to tackling the illness in a bid to get the thousands of unwitting sufferers on to treatment programmes.

The figures account for almost a quarter of the entire estimated diabetic population – both diagnosed and undiagnosed – in the district, which the study says now tops 32,000.

Type 2 diabetes can go undetected for up to ten years and around half of people already show signs of complications by the time they are diagnosed.

Early diagnosis and effective management of the condition are crucial in reducing the risk of developing life-changing complications.

Linda Wood, Diabetes UK Northern and Yorkshire regional manager, said: “This new estimate of more than 7,000 undiagnosed Type 2 cases in Bradford and Airedale is truly alarming. “PCTs need to better prioritise screening of at-risk groups and improve uptake of programmes such as NHS Health Checks.”

Chris Harris, GP and clinical lead for diabetes for NHS Bradford and Airedale said: “We are aware of the significant increase in diabetes and this is one of our priority health challenges.

“More clinics are now provided closer to people’s homes and access to services for patients with diabetes has been improved, particularly those from disadvantaged groups. By the end of the year, over 40 GP practices across the district will be able to give patients advanced diabetes care.

“Our community development team regularly organises events, in areas of Bradford where prevalence of type 2 diabetes is high, to increase early detection.

“These events help people to recognise signs, get tested for the condition and offer vital support for people who already have diabetes to help people manage the condition properly.”

The main risk factors for developing Type 2 diabetes are being overweight or having a large waist, being aged over 40 (or over 25 in black and South Asian people) and having a close relative with diabetes.

Comments(6)

albion says...
9:45am Sat 4 Sep 10

I am a diabetic, I am not fat eat a healthy diet and exercise much more than the recommended minimum, but I have complications mainly involving my eyes and circulation, I would urge people to do whatever they can to avoid the possibility of these thing happening to them, although looking around at people I see far too many who have obviously put themselves at risk.

Joedavid says...
10:36am Sat 4 Sep 10

Why so many people undiagnosed is the question.
My GP practice is extremely keen to test patients for this and other things are the other GPs not doing the tests on patients before problems start?

Brent_Meister says...
11:06am Sat 4 Sep 10

albion wrote:
I am a diabetic, I am not fat eat a healthy diet and exercise much more than the recommended minimum, but I have complications mainly involving my eyes and circulation, I would urge people to do whatever they can to avoid the possibility of these thing happening to them, although looking around at people I see far too many who have obviously put themselves at risk.
Mental illness and stress also play a part in the cause of diabetes.
.
We shouldn't get too worked up about certain things, albion :)

spinnekop says...
12:53pm Sat 4 Sep 10

Thats 2600 less than managed to grip a pen to cost the local tax payer half a million.

Fat people win again.

Dont make me laugh, I might fall over and not get up.

Steve30d says...
4:19pm Sat 4 Sep 10

So does this mean people will actually see specialists who check to see if people actually have type 2 rather than assuming poor sugar control means type 2?

My partner spent 2+ years being given meds for type 2 diabetes, which made her very ill. After finally getting to see a consultant earlier this year test results came back and she's not got type 2 but type 1. Since meds where changed to match what IS actually wrong she's been much better. And contrary to expectations has lost weight.

Also the "pee on a stick" test doesn't always work.

albion says...
5:52pm Sat 4 Sep 10

Brent_Meister wrote:
albion wrote:
I am a diabetic, I am not fat eat a healthy diet and exercise much more than the recommended minimum, but I have complications mainly involving my eyes and circulation, I would urge people to do whatever they can to avoid the possibility of these thing happening to them, although looking around at people I see far too many who have obviously put themselves at risk.
Mental illness and stress also play a part in the cause of diabetes.
.
We shouldn't get too worked up about certain things, albion :)
I always remain calm.


Being overweight can cause diabetes Being overweight can cause diabetes

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