16-10-2014 7:48 PM
18-10-2014 2:29 PM
@bhgardeners wrote:So you tell me how my son could have avoided diabetes?. Be born to different parents? Pity there is absolutely no history in either family of either type 1 or 2 diabetes.
I have no idea of the specifics of your son. However, as a general rule for the rest of the population I think it's fair to say 3 of the 4 main causes of type 2 diabetes are avoidable, and the risk of developing it can be reduced:
The rapid rise in the number of adults developing type 2 diabetes is due to:
http://www.nhs.uk/conditions/Diabetes-type2/Pages/Introduction.aspx
18-10-2014 4:06 PM
How much of the "increase" in type 2 diabetes is due to screening and better diagnosis?
18-10-2014 5:23 PM
@upthecreekyetagain wrote:How much of the "increase" in type 2 diabetes is due to screening and better diagnosis?
No idea. But figures suggest there's still a way to go - On that last link, apparently 850,000 people in England have diabetes, but haven't been diagnosed as yet.
18-10-2014 5:52 PM
@bookhunter2007 wrote:
@upthecreekyetagain wrote:How much of the "increase" in type 2 diabetes is due to screening and better diagnosis?
No idea. But figures suggest there's still a way to go - On that last link, apparently 850,000 people in England have diabetes, but haven't been diagnosed as yet.
If those 850,000 were diagnosed tomorrow then no doubt the headlines would state that the incidence of type 2 diabetes had dramatically risen and estimates of the number undiagnosed would leap based on the numbers that had been diagnosed!
18-10-2014 6:39 PM
Possibly, but there would need to be a stimulus (publicity drive, national screening campaign, diabetic Big Brother housemate) for those to get diagnosed to get a more accurate picture. AFAIK the publicity surrounding Jade Goody's Cervical Cancer prompted many young women to be tested, and thus some cancers were detected early, raising the actual prevalence rate. I don't think this had any bearing by spiking the estimate of undiagnosed cases.
19-10-2014 12:06 PM
19-10-2014 1:24 PM
I think the only way you can address those who take the service for granted is to raise NI contributions but to discount those who look after their health by living a more healthy lifestyle
That would be back to the deserving and undeserving.
Who would be judging if any one person is looking after their health suffciently, what criteria would they use?
19-10-2014 2:04 PM
Well it certainly isn't coping at the moment and as demand increases, the problem is only going to get worse. Unless it is run on a much more sensible and logical basis, it will not survive; throwing money at it is not the answer, it would be like a sponge and will absorb any money thrown at it and still need more. Things run by the State, never seem to thrive and make money IMHO; that's why so much has been privatised over the Years and now makes a profit. For most of those, they have become "Pay as you go" when their services are required. If we want a National Health Service that's free to all, at source, then we are going to have to be prepared to fund it and run it properly......................and that would be better achieved by People who know what they are doing.......NOT Politicians.
19-10-2014 4:55 PM