BEIJING, July 14 -- Healthcare providers at the
grassroots should play a bigger role in preventing and controlling diabetes,
which currently afflicts more than 40 million Chinese, health officials and
experts have said.
Going to doctors in large hospitals for treatment and
taking prescribed medication is not adequate for containing diabetes, said Yang
Wenying, chairwoman of the Chinese Diabetes Society.
"We need qualified educators to help patients combat
the chronic disease," Yang said at the launching ceremony of the Jonson-Jonson
Diabetes Institute on Friday.
Every year, about 1.2 million people develop diabetes
in China, with more than 30 percent unaware that they have the disease, Yang
said.
Similarly, there is a common misconception of the
disease - many believe that it is not lethal as related deaths are often from
the complications that come with it rather than the disease itself, experts have
said.
Diabetes sufferers are at risk of many other diseases
and premature death as it damages body tissue.
It can lead to stroke, heart disease, kidney failure,
blindness.
Worldwide, about 3.8 million deaths are attributed to
diabetes every year, World Health Organization statistics show.
"The low awareness and poor knowledge among the
general public are largely due to the lack of a nationwide standardized diabetes
management system and professionals in the field," Professor Fu Zhuzhi of the
No. 2 Hospital affiliated with Sun Yat-sen University in Guangdong, said.
Under the country's current healthcare system, there
are no professional diabetes educators who are usually available at the
grassroots-level clinics in most developed countries in the world, he said.
Healthcare workers at the grassroots here are not
trained in diabetes management including complication screening, raising
awareness of the disease and prevention, Fu said.
"Previously, the health authorities were more likely
to be distracted by more immediate threats like SARS and bird flu," said Kong
Lingzhi, deputy director of the disease prevention and control bureau of the
Health Ministry.
Now, with full recognition of disease as a health
threat that can cause numerous fatalities and economic losses every year, the
government has been coming up with relevant policies and measures to deal with
the scourge, she said.
"The top priority in the battle against diabetes is
to fully involve healthcare providers at the grassroots," Kong said.
In the next five years, the Jonson-Jonson Diabetes
Institute is expected to train 16,000 diabetes educators at the grassroots
level, certified by the ministry, to help fight the disease, she said.
Apart from nurses, nutritionists and trained patients
can also act as educators, she said.
"Only with an in-depth understanding of patients'
personalities, the disease, and health, can the educators do a good job."
(Source: China Daily)