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Substantial fall in diabetic health checks as GPs reprioritised during pandemic


The proportion of patients with type 2 diabetes who have had recommended health checks has fallen substantially, provisional data from 2021 suggests, as have the numbers hitting key disease control targets.

In response, primary care experts have called for GP practices to receive targeted investment to focus on the checks, which they had to deprioritise as the vaccination programme was introduced.

There are now 3.24 million people with a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes in England, the data across all GP practices shows.

National Diabetes Audit figures for England from January to September 2021 showed that:

  • 74% of patients had received a HbA1c check and 70% a blood pressure check compared with 93% and 95% respectively in 2019/20.
  • In the first nine months of last year, 61.9% of patients had an HbA1c under 58 mmol/mol, compared with around 66% in previous years.
  • The proportion of patients with blood pressure targets of under 140/80 was 66.5% in the latest figures compared with around 73-74% during 2015 to 2020.

Speaking with Pulse, Professor Partha Kar, NHS England national specialty advisor for diabetes said while this was not the final data, a drop off had been expected for a range of reasons outside GPs control.

‘What we have seen is that there was a massive drop off in wave one. Then around the middle of 2020 it started to pick up again but then it’s dropping off again so irrespective of data cleaning, I suspect you will see a massive drop off compared to where things have been over the last four or five years.

‘We need to be very clear its not because anyone was twiddling their thumbs, it’s because primary care was asked to do something else.

‘We can’t go back to primary care again for the vaccines because they are being taken away from the thing that they’re amazing at which is delivering long-term conditions at scale.’

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Source: Pulse, 2 February 2022

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