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Diabetische neuropathie neemt toe
| Diabetische neuropathie neemt toe |
De hoeveelheid mensen die klachten hebben van een diabetische neuropathie zal in de toekomst sterk toenemen. Daarmee ook het aantal patienten dat last heeft van ongewoon ernstige pijnen aan de voeten en benen, de neuropathische pijn. Alleen al in de VS zal het aantal patienten met diabetes in de komende 25 jaar bijna verdubbelen. In een pers stuk liet de universiteit van Chicago op 27 november 2009 weten hoe het met de cijfers staat:
Diabetes cases to double and costs to triple by 2034In the next 25 years, the number of Americans living with diabetes will nearly double, increasing from 23.7 million in 2009 to 44.1 million in 2034. Over the same period, spending on diabetes will almost triple, rising from $113 billion to $336 billion, even with no increase in the prevalence of obesity, researchers based at the University of Chicago report in the December issue of Diabetes Care.The number of those with diabetes covered by Medicare will rise from 8.2 million to 14.6 million, the researchers predict. Medicare spending on diabetes will jump from $45 billion to $171 billion. "If we don't change our diet and exercise habits or find new, more effective and less expensive ways to prevent and treat diabetes, we will find ourselves in a lot of trouble as a population," said the study's lead author Elbert Huang, MD, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Chicago. "Without significant changes in public or private strategies," the authors wrote, "this population and cost growth are expected to add a significant strain to an overburdened health care system." The new estimates are far more rigorous, and more troubling, than previous predictions.
The most recent and alarming prediction may even be a bit conservative. It is based on the assumption that the prevalence of the overweight and obese in the United States will remain relatively stable. Although obesity levels have gone up steadily for many years, the authors predict that the obesity levels for the non-diabetic population will top out in the next decade, then decline slightly, from 30 percent today to about 27 percent by 2033. "Despite recent trends in obesity rates," Huang explained, "we anticipate that the population will reach an equilibrium in obesity levels, since we cannot all become obese." The 2009 Diabetes Care study places increased emphasis on changes in demographics, advances in treatment, and the natural history of this disease, including the timing and frequency of its costly complications. Much of the increase in cases and in costs will be driven by aging "baby boomers," the 77 million Americans born between 1946 and 1957 who are approaching the age of retirement, diabetes complications, and federal health insurance. Various characteristics of the modern natural history of diabetes and its treatments contribute to increasing the costs of diabetes for the population. People with diabetes are now being diagnosed at younger ages. Thanks to better treatments, they are living longer. This leads to a longer history of disease, opportunities for more aggressive therapies, and time to accumulate complications, which are costly to treat. Diabetes is the leading cause of blindness, end-stage kidney disease and amputations. Een van de complicaties die frequent voorkomt bij diabetes is de neuropathie. Vandaar dat het van groot belang is dat patienten met deze aandoening beter geholpen gaan worden November 2009: prof. dr. Jan M. Keppel Hesselink
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