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Study finds a lack of Health Insurance
may roadblock some Diabetes patients from
seeking critical treatment… American
Podiatric Medical Association releases study
on Diabetes and Foot Care within the
African-American Community
BETHESDA, Md., Nov. 19
/PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- With more than
80,000 lower-limb amputations reported
annually among people with diabetes in the
United States, there's a possibility many
amputations, especially among
African-Americans, could have been prevented
if patients had health
insurance.
A recent national survey
conducted by the American Podiatric
Medical Association (APMA)
found nearly ten percent of the 3.2 million
African-Americans with diabetes are
uninsured. Of those, 75 percent have NOT
seen a podiatric physician for diabetes
treatment reportedly due to no health
coverage, compared to 45 percent of those
with insurance who do see a podiatrist.
"Podiatric physicians are
a critical part of a diabetes management
team," said Dr. Christian Robertozzi, APMA
president. "Because a person with diabetes
can experience circulatory problems and even
loss of sensation in the feet, it's critical
that they receive proper foot care to avoid
complications, such diabetic ulcers or
amputations."
In fact, diabetes is the
leading cause of non-traumatic, lower-limb
amputations in United States.
African-Americans are almost three times as
likely to suffer from lower-limb amputations
as Caucasian-Americans.
The study, which surveyed
by phone 600 African-Americans across the
country with diabetes or a family history of
the disease, revealed 97 percent of those
with the disease regularly visited a doctor.
However, 57 percent reported they'd never
seen a podiatric physician because many
felt, "there is nothing wrong with my feet."
The reality is a vast
majority of amputations can be prevented if
the following potential warning signs are
detected early in the feet:
-- Numbness
-- Redness
-- Tingling sensations
-- Burning sensations
-- Loss of hair
-- Cuts and scrapes
that are slow to heal.
If you have experienced
any of these symptoms, see a podiatric
physician. Tingling in the
feet (68%), cramping in the calves (54%),
burning in the feet (48%) and slow to heel
wounds (16%) are some of the most common
lower-limb ailments reported by
African-Americans with diabetes in the APMA
study.
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