Novo Nordisk Convenes Policy and Clinical Experts at Diabetes Media Summit
12 Junho 2009 - 11:25AM
PR Newswire (US)
Panel Addresses Barriers to Care and the Threatening Impact of
Diabetes in America WASHINGTON, June 12 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- A
distinguished panel of clinical and policy experts gathered by Novo
Nordisk recently convened in Washington, D.C. to explore solutions
to address the exponential growth of diabetes in America. The
universal theme from the renowned speakers, including Larry
Hausner, CEO of the American Diabetes Association (ADA), was that
the cost of the disease to our nation, at $218 billion annually, is
startling and the lag in patient motivation to take action to
offset the disease is distressing. Without intervention at both a
national and patient level, our nation runs the risk of reaching a
projected 50 million Americans having diabetes by the year 2025. To
view the Multimedia News Release, go to:
http://www.prhealthnews.com/press/novonordisk/diabetes-media-summit/
"The growing prevalence of diabetes is having a profound effect on
the health of current and future generations, as well as our
national economy," said Hausner. "We must awaken the public's
consciousness of diabetes, and ensure our leaders in Congress
recognize healthcare reform as their opportunity to transform the
lives of all people affected by this devastating disease." Economic
Burden of Diabetes Starts Early With policy-makers in the midst of
what could be the most far-reaching changes to our nation's
healthcare system, data presented by Tim Dall, vice president, the
Lewin Group, a health economist and investigator on numerous
analytical and policy modeling studies, highlighted the importance
of not just diabetes care, but also diabetes prevention as being
significant considerations in healthcare reform. "We tend to focus
on the 23.6 million people living with diabetes, but need to face
the fact that there are an additional 57 million American adults
with pre-diabetes," said Dall. "In research, we observed that these
patients often begin to experience disease-related complications
even before their blood glucose has progressed to a level for
diagnosis, resulting in what is estimated to be more than $25
billion in annual medical costs." Underwritten by Novo Nordisk's
National Changing Diabetes(R) Program (NCDP) as part of its
Economic Barometer, the Economic Cost of Pre-diabetes findings will
be published in the upcoming issue of Population Health Management.
Re-evaluating Government Spending on Diabetes The US government
spent $80 billion to treat diabetes in 2005 alone, an amount that
is 400 times greater than the federal commitment to diabetes
prevention. Based on these staggering statistics, experts agreed
that policy-makers need to face diabetes head on, just as our
nation has done with other diseases, including AIDs and breast
cancer. "This is a time of opportunity from a legislative
perspective to make a change in healthcare in the United States. We
need look no further than the numbers to realize that real health
reform isn't possible unless the country reforms diabetes
prevention, detection and care. These changes will require focused
engagement from individual Americans as well as state and federal
governments," said Dana Haza, senior director, National Changing
Diabetes(R) Program. When considering the NIH research dollar
allocation for FY 2008, the most recent year available, it is
evident that diabetes research is desperately under-funded: -- Only
3.7 percent of the NIH budget goes to diabetes research, despite
the fact that one-in-five health care dollars is spent caring for
someone with diabetes and one-in-ten dollars spent on health care
is attributable to diabetes and its complications(1). -- Cancer
receives five times more research dollars than diabetes. --
HIV/AIDS receives 2.7 times more research dollars than diabetes
(2). Bridging the Knowledge Gap While most Americans are aware of
diabetes, a gap exists between awareness and the knowledge and
implementation of behavioral changes that can help to prevent or
delay the consequences of diabetes. One-in-four people at risk for
diabetes think they are unlikely to develop the disease, despite
the fact that one-in-two Americans are affected by diabetes. While
this knowledge gap is a barrier to changing the current path of
diabetes, there is room for optimism. "As with many things, the
biggest impediment to changing diabetes is changing people's minds.
The Diabetes Media Summit and expert opinions provide a snapshot of
a problem that is often hard to see but too big to ignore," said
Dr. Nathaniel Clark, senior medical advisor, diabetes, Novo
Nordisk. "With ongoing research, multi-disciplinary collaboration
and public education, we can change diabetes and improve the health
of America." Michael O'Grady, Ph.D., senior fellow, National
Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago, and an expert
on the congressional budgeting process, stressed that diabetes
poses one of the nation's greatest public health challenges,
underscoring the need to adjust our focus to include the chronic
condition, not just the acute phase. O'Grady pointed to diabetes as
the potential model for changing current healthcare legislation
scoring. "Diabetes has the best data, the best modeling and the
best studies," said O'Grady. "If we can intervene with a certain
cohort of patients and figure out what that intervention will cost
during the progression of the disease, then we can bring together
the clinical trial data in an effective way to really help
policy-makers make much better-informed decisions." "I've reported
on the leading healthcare issues that challenge our scientific
expertise, our resources and, most importantly, our compassion,"
said panel moderator George Lundberg, MD, former editor-in-chief of
The Journal of the American Medical Association, eMedicine and The
Medscape Journal of Medicine. "The diabetes threat is not just
under-funded, but also dramatically under-communicated at a time
when the message needs to come through loud and clear that we are
in the midst of a major epidemic that is impacting the long-term
state of our nation's health, both human and financial." About the
Diabetes Media Summit The Diabetes Media Summit was presented by
Novo Nordisk and included the participation of Tim Dall, vice
president, the Lewin Group; Michael L. Mawby, chief government
affairs officer, Novo Nordisk; George Lundberg, MD, former
editor-in-chief of The Journal of the American Medical Association,
eMedicine and The Medscape Journal of Medicine; Nathaniel Clark,
MD, senior medical advisor, diabetes, Novo Nordisk; Lori Moore,
executive director, communications and public affairs, Novo
Nordisk; Michael O'Grady, PhD, senior fellow, National Opinion
Research Center at the University of Chicago; and Dana Haza, senior
director, National Changing Diabetes(R) Program. About Novo Nordisk
Novo Nordisk is a healthcare company with an 86-year history of
innovation and achievement in diabetes care. The company has the
broadest diabetes product portfolio in the industry, including the
most advanced products within the area of insulin delivery systems.
In addition to diabetes care, Novo Nordisk has a leading position
within areas such as hemostasis management, growth hormone therapy,
and hormone therapy for women. Novo Nordisk's business is driven by
the Triple Bottom Line: a commitment to social responsibility to
employees and customers, environmental soundness and economic
success. With headquarters in Denmark, Novo Nordisk employs more
than 27,900 employees in 81 countries, and markets its products in
179 countries. Novo Nordisk's B shares are listed on the stock
exchanges in Copenhagen and London. Its ADRs are listed on the New
York Stock Exchange under the symbol 'NVO'. For global information,
visit novonordisk.com; for United States information, visit
novonordisk-us.com. (1)
http://care.diabetesjournals.org/cgi/content/extract/diacare;31/3/624
(2) http://report.nih.gov/rcdc/categories/
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20020404/NVOLOGOhttp://www.prhealthnews.com/press/novonordisk/diabetes-media-summit/DATASOURCE:
Novo Nordisk CONTACT: Media: Sean Clements, +1-609-514-8316, , or
Investors: Hans Rommer, +1-609-919-7937, Web Site:
http://www.novonordisk.com/
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