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Rewarding for you and us Defeat Diabetes Foundation Defeat Diabetes
Foundation 150 153rd Ave, Suite 300 Madeira Beach, FL 33708 |
Only 47% of People With Diabetes Get Screened for Diabetic Eye DiseasePosted: Thursday, October 04, 2007Only 47% of people with diabetes get yearly exams. Increasing patient and clinician awareness and improving access to health care can encourage people with diabetes to seek annual eye exams, which help prevent a serious complication called retinopathy, according to a new systematic review of studies. However, the studies showed that these tactics are less successful when conducted among ethnic minorities or in rural areas, according to researchers led by Xuanping Zhang, Ph.D., of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Minorities have a higher prevalence of diabetes than whites do, according to the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Some minority groups also have much higher rates of diabetes-related complications, in some instances by as much as 50 percent more than the total population. Diabetic retinopathy occurs when chronically elevated blood-sugar levels damage small blood vessels in the eye. The disease might cause very few symptoms before vision loss begins, and it remains the leading cause of new-onset blindness among American adults. Careful control of blood glucose and blood pressure can reduce the risk of these eye problems, and in more advanced cases, laser surgery can often preserve vision. The American Diabetes Association recommends dilated eye exams at least once a year for most people with the disease. However, in 1998, only 47 percent of U.S. patients followed this advice. One of the nation’s health objectives is to increase this figure to 75 percent by 2010. The new systematic review provides evidence on effective ways to promote annual screenings for diabetic retinopathy. It appears in the October issue of American Journal of Preventive Medicine. The review includes 48 studies with more than 160,000 participants from the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom, Israel, Saudi Arabia and other developed countries. “In all randomized controlled trials but one, interventions achieved statistically significant increases in retinal screening rates in the intervention group compared to the control group,” Zhang said. The studies looked at a wide range of approaches to promoting eye exams — some emphasizing patients or populations, and others focusing on health care providers. Data showed that the following interventions are effective: • Increasing patient and provider awareness of diabetic retinopathy Evidence also suggested that these approaches are more likely to succeed when the interventions are part of a multifaceted program. “We have to start thinking about other ways of reaching people,” Cavallerano said. “One way would be to bring eye care to a person, rather than wait for a person to come to care.” The Joslin Vision Network Diabetes Eye Care Program uses telemedicine for its outreach efforts. Local clinicians can use high-tech digital cameras to photograph patients’ retinas. They then transmit the images electronically to specialists for analysis and treatment recommendations. Regardless of patient characteristics, the American Diabetes Association Web site makes one fact very clear. “Having your regular doctor look at your eyes is not enough, nor is having your eyeglass prescription tested by an optician. Only optometrists and ophthalmologists can detect the signs of retinopathy.” Source: Diabetes In Control: American Journal of Preventive Medicine: X, et al. Effectiveness of interventions to promote screening for diabetic retinopathy. Am J Prev Med 33(4), 2007. |
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