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The National Diabetes Management Strategy: Diabetes Facts and Figures By using these slides, you agree to the terms on the next slide. The development of these slides was made possible through financial support by Merck.
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Terms of Use By using this web site and/or these slides and/or requesting and receiving the information on this site, you are accepting these terms of use. These slides and the related information on the The National Diabetes Management Strategy website synthesize publicly available information in a convenient format. This information is intended for use by policymakers, managers, media, planners, clinicians and researchers. All information provided on this site and in these slides is publicly available from the original sources. All information is attributed to the original source. All information in these slides is copyrighted by other parties. As a visitor to this site, you are granted a limited license to use the information contained within for non-commercial use only, provided the information is not modified and all copyright and other proprietary notices are retained. The National Diabetes Management Strategy and The University of Western Ontario resides in Ontario, Canada and this site and any transactions which you enter into through this site are governed by the laws of Ontario, Canada and the federal laws of Canada applicable therein. The faculty and staff of The National Diabetes Management Strategy The University of Western Ontario shall not be liable for any damages, claims, liabilities, costs or obligations arising from the use or misuse of the material contained on this web site, whether such obligations arise in contract, negligence, equity or statute law. The National Diabetes Management Strategy and The University of Western Ontario do not guarantee or warrant the quality, accuracy, completeness, timeliness, appropriateness or suitability of the information provided. Links to other sites are provided as a reference to assist you in identifying and locating other Internet resources that may be of interest. The National Diabetes Management Strategy and The University of Western Ontario does not assume responsibility for the accuracy or appropriateness of the information contained on other sites, nor do we endorse the viewpoints expressed on other sites.
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Diabetes is an Expensive Disease
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Diabetes is Straining Worldwide Healthcare Budgets In 2012, the estimated global healthcare cost to diagnose and treat diabetes is at least $471 billion USD. International Diabetes Federation. Diabetes Atlas Update 2012.
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Diabetes is Straining Canadian Healthcare Budgets The economic burden of diabetes in Canada is: –currently estimated to be $12.2. billion –expected to increase to $16.9 billion by 2020. The direct costs of diabetes currently account for approximately 3.5% of public healthcare spending. Canadian Diabetes Association. An Economic Tsunami, The Cost Of Diabetes. 2009
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Healthcare Costs for Diabetes Will Increase As the general population ages, the prevalence of diabetes and the associated costs are expected to increase. As the population with diabetes ages, there will be an increase in long-term complications (e.g. cardiovascular disease, kidney disease) and associated costs to treat these complications (e.g. hospitalizations, dialysis). Public Health Agency of Canada. Diabetes in Canada: Facts and Figures from a Public Health Perspective. Ottawa, ON: 2011.
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Diabetes is Straining American Healthcare Budgets In 2012, the total estimated cost of diagnosed diabetes was $245 billion – $176 billion in direct medical costs and $69 billion in reduced productivity. People with diagnosed diabetes have medical expenditures that are about 2.3 times higher than they would be in the absence of diabetes. More than 1 in 5 healthcare dollars in the US is spent on people with diabetes. American Diabetes Association. Economic costs of diabetes in the U.S. in 2012. Diabetes Care. Ahead of print, March 6, 2013.
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