
Education is key for patient and caregiver
November is National Diabetes Awareness Month. In 2012, 29.1 million Americans, or 9.3 percent of the population, had diabetes. 1.4 million Americans are diagnosed with diabetes every year.
The Diabetes Assessment and Management Center (DiAMC) in Shreveport is working to help patients with this increasingly diagnosed disease, providing primary care, diabetes care and chronic care.
“Our purpose is to improve the quality of life for people with diabetes through better health outcomes and reduced cost.
Diabetes has been described as a slowmotion catastrophe because patients often don’t feel sick, and many patients do not take diabetes seriously until consequences are severe and they face long-term complications. Diabetes in the U.S. has reached epidemic proportions and has become an unprecedented public health burden,” said DiAMC President Clay Crenshaw.
When a patient is diagnosed with any form of diabetes, whether it’s Type 1, Type 2, gestational or another form, education is key for the patient and his or her caregiver.
A diabetes diagnosis calls for changes in all areas of life, from diet to physical activity to travel.
“Diabetes
education is a critical element of care for all people with diabetes
and those at risk for developing the disease. It provides the foundation
to help people with diabetes to navigate daily health decisions and
activities and has been shown to improve their health. The overall
objectives of diabetes education are to support informed decision
making, selfcare behaviors, problem solving and active collaboration
with the health-care team in order to prevent or delay the complications
of diabetes, such as heart disease, stroke, nerve damage (neuropathy),
kidney damage (nephropathy), eye damage (retinopathy) and amputation,”
Crenshaw said.
Diabetes
is a problem with your body that causes blood glucose (sugar) levels to
rise higher than normal. Most of the center’s patients are Type 2
diabetics, which is also known as adult onset diabetes. Type 2 is the
most common form of diabetes, affecting up to 95 percent of people
battling diabetes, according to Crenshaw. However, Type 2 diabetes can
be reversed.
The
clinic also sees patients with Type 1 diabetes, which is traditionally
known as juvenile diabetes. Though many develop Type 1 diabetes as
children, it’s now more common to develop Type 1 diabetes as an adult.
Type 1 diabetes is a chronic illness that cannot be reversed, but it can
be managed with insulin.
According
to a 2015 medical study, nearly 50 percent of adults living in the U.S.
have diabetes or pre-diabetes, a condition where a person already has
elevated blood sugar and is at risk to develop diabetes.
Many seem to feel a stigma about diabetes, feeling patients brought the disease on themselves.
“People
with diabetes are often treated differently and sometimes suffer from
low self-esteem and fear of rejection by loved ones or discrimination at
school, work and in social situations. Knowledge and awareness of
diabetes are the keys to creating a sense of urgency about this growing
public health crisis,” he said.
Through his work at DiAMC, Crenshaw has been able to see patients transform their lives and work toward their goals.
“It
has been rewarding to watch our patients reverse their diabetes with
the help of our program. They significantly improve their quality of
life and appreciably reduce their health-care costs. Patients do not
heal selectively so I’ve seen patients reduce or eliminate expensive
mediations for diabetes, blood pressure and cholesterol as well. Many
patients experience weight loss and find improvement in other comorbid
conditions,” he said.
Patients
do not need a referral from a physician to visit DiAMC, but they can
collaborate their care at DiAMC with their primary physician. To make an
appointment, call 212-1194.