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UK failing to implement diabetes strategy: charity

By Richard Woodman

LONDON (Agence de Presse Medicale for Reuters Health) - Britain's plans for tackling its huge diabetes epidemic have so far failed to make much practical difference to the lives of patients, according to the charity Diabetes UK.

Its chief executive, Benet Middleton, told APM that standards of care still varied widely and that research to find out how best to introduce screening programmes to detect the estimated one million people who don't yet know they have diabetes had been delayed.

Middleton raised his concerns earlier this week with Rosie Winterton, the junior health minister with special responsibility for diabetes.

Around 1.5 million Britons have been diagnosed with type 1 or type 2 diabetes, and another one million are thought to have type 2 diabetes that has not yet been diagnosed. The numbers are expected to double over the next 10 years at massive cost to the National Health Service.

Realising the problem, the Department of Health announced plans in 1999 for a "National Service Framework" that would set standards for preventing, identifying and managing diabetes.

The standards were published in 2002 and a final implementation document followed in January 2003. This set two key targets: guidance on screening programmes by 2005; and local registers of diabetic patients by 2006.

Middleton said that the framework was an important step forward as it signaled that diabetes was a priority, but the response at local level was very mixed.

One weakness was that since the framework was announced in 1999 there had been a radical change of healthy policy that had shifted the balance of power from centrally set health targets to local control of budgets.

As a result, while some Primary Care Trusts (local health bodies) took their responsibilities under the framework very seriously, others were failing to do so.

A survey by the healthcare company Dr Forster last year found that less than third of health services had a strategy for early detection of diabetes and almost a quarter were not providing adequate information for those who are diagnosed.

"One of the things the Department of Health promised is that within a year people would notice a difference. I am not sure about that," Middleton said.

He said screening of high-risk groups for type 2 diabetes had still not been introduced because the government first wanted to find out the most cost-effective way of screening.

"I think screening should have been introduced when the document came out in 2003 but we accepted this two-year delay (until the 2005 target date) on the basis that more research was needed on how to do it effectively.

"But very little research has been commissioned, and what we don't want is to be in a position in 2005 when they say there is still inadequate information to introduce a screening programme."

Middleton said plans to set up local patient registers also faced problems as general practitioners and primary care trusts often used different computer software. As a result, there was still no systematic way of planning services and delivering good care.

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