For healthcare professionals working with people who have diabetes, these are very exciting times. We are able to tell people about a wealth of new treatments and technology to making living with diabetes easier. We are able to talk about the potential to prevent the progression of the disease and possibly, in some individuals, induce remission. We are at a point where we should see a step-change in the way that diabetes impacts on individuals’ lives.
The future looks bright and we have good reason to be optimistic. However, we do need to remember that, although we have the potential to significantly impact on these diseases and their complications, at the moment this is not always translating into significantly improved outcomes. This is certainly true when considering the delivery of care to people with diabetes and foot disease. Somewhere in the delivery of foot care, we are not translating the results seen in research studies into overall improvement at the population level.
The recent paper by a group of researchers in Melbourne and Brisbane, Australia, makes for sobering reading. Perhaps the picture is not quite as bright as we think. We need to understand why, with the tools we now have available to us, we are failing to see any trend of improvement in overall care delivered.
The authors describe a recent analysis of diabetes registry data that covers all of the East coast states of Australia (accounting for 80–90% of the country’s total population), together with records of admission to hospital. Australians identified as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islanders were excluded from the study as health data for this group is recorded elsewhere. Recent studies from other developed nations had suggested improvements in foot care as evidenced by reductions in amputation rates. The authors argue that reporting amputation rates alone can result in a confusing picture, as the overall term amputation can include a variety of procedures performed for a variety of reasons. Hospitalisation rates for each of the foot-related complications was felt to give a more accurate picture.
Unfortunately, the conclusion of the paper is that diabetes-related foot disease admissions remain high and are increasing for both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Although the more detailed analysis suggested stability or reductions in below-knee and above-knee amputations, there was an increase in all other categories of foot complications. The results may partly be explained by people with diabetes living longer and, therefore, having more years exposed to diabetes, but this did not fully explain the results.
Nationwide screening and management programmes have been established in both Australia and the UK to prevent and manage foot disease in the community. This does not require complex technology or expensive therapies, but it does need regular and routine clinical care provided by health professionals. Hospitalisation rates reflect the success or otherwise of these programmes. The authors feel that their results from Australia can be extrapolated to other developed countries, and it seems likely to me that the results in this paper would be mirrored if the same work was performed in the UK.
In 2014, the UK was spending just under a billion pounds on the management of diabetic foot disease (Kerr et al, 2019). On the evidence of Matthew Quigley and colleagues, these costs will have increased significantly. Although new treatments capture the headlines, there is an ongoing need to provide basic clinical care. It would seem there is plenty more that can, and should, be done.
Click here to read the Digest.
Diabetes Digest
Issue:
Early View
Diabetes and foot disease: Walking not running
For healthcare professionals working with people who have diabetes, these are very exciting times. We are able to tell people about a wealth of new treatments and technology to making living with diabetes easier. We are able to talk about the potential to prevent the progression of the disease and possibly, in some individuals, induce remission. We are at a point where we should see a step-change in the way that diabetes impacts on individuals’ lives.
The future looks bright and we have good reason to be optimistic. However, we do need to remember that, although we have the potential to significantly impact on these diseases and their complications, at the moment this is not always translating into significantly improved outcomes. This is certainly true when considering the delivery of care to people with diabetes and foot disease. Somewhere in the delivery of foot care, we are not translating the results seen in research studies into overall improvement at the population level.
The recent paper by a group of researchers in Melbourne and Brisbane, Australia, makes for sobering reading. Perhaps the picture is not quite as bright as we think. We need to understand why, with the tools we now have available to us, we are failing to see any trend of improvement in overall care delivered.
The authors describe a recent analysis of diabetes registry data that covers all of the East coast states of Australia (accounting for 80–90% of the country’s total population), together with records of admission to hospital. Australians identified as Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islanders were excluded from the study as health data for this group is recorded elsewhere. Recent studies from other developed nations had suggested improvements in foot care as evidenced by reductions in amputation rates. The authors argue that reporting amputation rates alone can result in a confusing picture, as the overall term amputation can include a variety of procedures performed for a variety of reasons. Hospitalisation rates for each of the foot-related complications was felt to give a more accurate picture.
Unfortunately, the conclusion of the paper is that diabetes-related foot disease admissions remain high and are increasing for both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Although the more detailed analysis suggested stability or reductions in below-knee and above-knee amputations, there was an increase in all other categories of foot complications. The results may partly be explained by people with diabetes living longer and, therefore, having more years exposed to diabetes, but this did not fully explain the results.
Nationwide screening and management programmes have been established in both Australia and the UK to prevent and manage foot disease in the community. This does not require complex technology or expensive therapies, but it does need regular and routine clinical care provided by health professionals. Hospitalisation rates reflect the success or otherwise of these programmes. The authors feel that their results from Australia can be extrapolated to other developed countries, and it seems likely to me that the results in this paper would be mirrored if the same work was performed in the UK.
In 2014, the UK was spending just under a billion pounds on the management of diabetic foot disease (Kerr et al, 2019). On the evidence of Matthew Quigley and colleagues, these costs will have increased significantly. Although new treatments capture the headlines, there is an ongoing need to provide basic clinical care. It would seem there is plenty more that can, and should, be done.
Click here to read the Digest.
Kerr M, Barron E, Chadwick P et al (2019) The cost of diabetic foot ulcers and amputations to the National Health Service in England. Diabet Med 36: 995–1002
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