On October 21, I received an email from
the ADA promoting the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF)
pronouncement. While I can agree with much of what they are
advocating, I am totally turned off when they label USPSTF as
alphabet soup because the acronym is six letters
long. To me this means that the ADA is belittling the USPSTF and
does not show respect.
Then they use scare tactics by listing
the serious complications that diabetes may cause supposedly to show
how serious diabetes can be. If the ADA was actually calling for
action and supporting the pronouncement of the USPSTF, you would
think they could choose a more positive introduction. Diabetes
receives enough bad publicity without the ADA adding to this.
Why they use the term Diabetes
Advocates to apply to themselves is a puzzle. The email author then
says, “This month our years of hard work paid off and the USPSTF
recommended – for the first time – that Americans with key risk
factors should be tested for diabetes. Studies show that currently
more than half of people with undiagnosed diabetes are not tested
because they do not meet the current diabetes screening guidelines.
Now this will change!”
The author also says this matters
because doctors around the country follow USPSTF recommendations.
Then the email author says this is vital testing will be completely
paid for by a patient's health insurance. Now this is where the two
doctors I have been corresponding with have expressed caution. They
both agreed that most private insurance companies may pay for the
screenings, but will they pay for the follow-up appointments if the
tests are positive. Medicare is the other concern as they have been
in the habit of not paying.
The doctors do have a large concern
about those that fall into the prediabetes range. Without the ADA
making this an official classification, they feel this will still be
an area that will not be covered, even with a prediabetes diagnosis.
The author of the ADA newsletter
declared that the change is critical citing the estimated annual
economic cost of undiagnosed diabetes is a staggering $18 billion.
With this change, the 10 million Americans with undiagnosed diabetes
and the 86 million with prediabetes will have a fighting chance to
take action before the devastating complications of diabetes take
hold, saving both lives and dollars.
The one thing that makes me hopeful –
will the ADA do something about renaming prediabetes and make it an
official diabetes designation? One can only hope.
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