Diabetes foot disease: the Cinderella of Australian diabetes management?
- PMID: 23021818
- PMCID: PMC3488529
- DOI: 10.1186/1757-1146-5-24
Diabetes foot disease: the Cinderella of Australian diabetes management?
Abstract
Diabetes is one of the greatest public health challenges to face Australia. It is already Australia's leading cause of kidney failure, blindness (in those under 60 years) and lower limb amputation, and causes significant cardiovascular disease. Australia's diabetes amputation rate is one of the worst in the developed world, and appears to have significantly increased in the last decade, whereas some other diabetes complication rates appear to have decreased. This paper aims to compare the national burden of disease for the four major diabetes-related complications and the availability of government funding to combat these complications, in order to determine where diabetes foot disease ranks in Australia. Our review of relevant national literature indicates foot disease ranks second overall in burden of disease and last in evidenced-based government funding to combat these diabetes complications. This suggests public funding to address foot disease in Australia is disproportionately low when compared to funding dedicated to other diabetes complications. There is ample evidence that appropriate government funding of evidence-based care improves all diabetes complication outcomes and reduces overall costs. Numerous diverse Australian peak bodies have now recommended similar diabetes foot evidence-based strategies that have reduced diabetes amputation rates and associated costs in other developed nations. It would seem intuitive that "it's time" to fund these evidence-based strategies for diabetes foot disease in Australia as well.
References
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- Matthews DR, Matthews PC. Type 2 diabetes as an ‘infectious’ disease: is this the Black Death of the 21st century? Diabet Med. 2011;28:2–9. - PubMed
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- International Diabetes Federation (IDF) IDF Diabetes Roadmap to the UN High-Level Summit on NCDS – Activity Report 2010–2011. Belgium: International Diabetes Federation; 2011. http://www.idf.org Accessed 25th June 2012.
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- International Diabetes Federation (IDF) Global Diabetes Plan 2011 – 2021. Belgium: International Diabetes Federation; 2011. http://www.idf.org Accessed 25th June 2012.
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