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Max
03-01-2005, 11:32 AM
Diabetes Prevention Efforts Worth Every Penny
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DIABETES PREVENTION PRE-DIABETES COST-EFFECTIVE DIET EXERCISE
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More than 40 million Americans face a high risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, and it would cost a lot to give all of them intensive help to prevent the disease from starting. But a new study shows for the first time that the effort would be worth the money.



More than 40 million Americans face a high risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, and it would cost a lot to give all of them intensive help with diet and exercise, or medication, to keep them from developing diabetes.

But not helping them would cost a lot, too - and would do nothing to stem the nation's diabetes epidemic and its vastly expensive medical consequences, according to a new study in the March issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine.

The study is the first to show that it would be cost-effective for society to try to prevent diabetes in people with a condition known as "pre-diabetes," or impaired glucose tolerance. An estimated 41 million Americans have the condition, in which blood sugar levels are higher than normal. Pre-diabetes is closely linked to obesity.

The new research shows that the costs of diabetes prevention are well within the range that American society has previously accepted for other preventive and curative health efforts.

The authors, led by a diabetes researcher from the University of Michigan Health System, conclude that American health policy should immediately begin promoting diabetes prevention in high-risk people. An accompanying editorial, by the leader of a large Finnish diabetes study, concurs.

The findings are based on sophisticated computer modeling of data from a large national clinical trial completed in 2001. It showed that in just three years, a one-on-one weight loss and exercise program substantially reduced the chance that a person with pre-diabetes would develop diabetes. It also showed that a diabetes drug called metformin can have a smaller, but still significant, preventive effect.

That study of 3,234 Americans, called the Diabetes Prevention Project, was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American Diabetes Association and two pharmaceutical companies.

"By projecting the DPP's findings into the future, and factoring in all costs including the future cost of diabetes complications, we were able to show cost-effectiveness on a societal basis, and in some age groups, cost savings compared with no action," says lead author William Herman, M.D., MPH, director of the Michigan Diabetes Research and Training Center at UMHS.

Three years after DPP's results were published, he says, it hasn't had the major impact on clinical practice that the researchers would have hoped for, because of cost concerns. He hopes the new paper will change that.

http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/510106/



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