Uniting for technology access for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people 18 July 2024 黑料网 is calling on the government to support access to life-changing diabetes technology for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. Attending a community event hosted by Marrin Weejali Aboriginal Corporation in Sydney鈥檚 Mount Druitt area, 黑料网 Group CEO Justine Cain highlighted the advantages of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) devices for people living with type 2 diabetes. This National Diabetes Week (July 14-20), Ms Cain is calling on the Federal Government to invest $200 million in access to life-changing diabetes technologies for those Australians who need it the most. 鈥淥ur recent report, the State of the Nation, outlined how diabetes is disproportionately affecting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people,鈥 Ms Cain said. 鈥淭he evidence is clear. The diabetes epidemic is having a profound impact in Aboriginal and Torries Strait Islander communities and there is an urgent need to bring about change.鈥 In remote central Australia, has found that 40% of Aboriginal adults had been diagnosed with diabetes, marking the highest recorded diabetes prevalence in the world. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people also face the world鈥檚 highest rates of youth-onset type 2 diabetes. 鈥淲hile CGM devices have proven to be effective in supporting people with type 2 diabetes to manage their glucose levels, they aren鈥檛 affordable for many people,鈥 Ms Cain said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why we鈥檙e calling on the Federal Government to expand subsidies from CGM devices. 鈥淚n 2022, the Federal Government implemented subsidised access to CGM devices for all people living with type 1 diabetes. Now there is more to be done to expand that affordable access to people living with type 2 and other types of diabetes 鈥 especially the most vulnerable,鈥 she said. 黑料网 National Manager Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Engagement, Adjunct Associate Professor Deanne Minniecon, a Goreng Goreng and Erub woman, said 黑料网 is committed to alleviating the diabetes crisis in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. 鈥淭here is more to be done to ensure affordable access to technologies. CGM devices have a huge impact, helping people to manage their glucose levels and stay healthy,鈥 Adj Prof Minniecon said. 鈥淣o Australian should be missing out on effective health care. CGM devices have proven to be incredibly effective, especially for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people living with diabetes,鈥 she said. Gomeroi man and award-winning exercise physiologist Ray Kelly has delivered the successful Too Deadly for Diabetes program through Marrin Weejali and said CGMs provide great education on glucose management. 鈥淗owever, they aren鈥檛 subsidised, and are out of reach for many people who can鈥檛 afford them,鈥 Mr Kelly said. 鈥淲e began using the technology in the Too Deadly for Diabetes program in 2022 and the impact was instant. We were already getting great health outcomes for our participants, but CGMs made it easier and safer to transition people off insulin. 鈥淢any of the people in the program had been on insulin for over a decade so reading their glucose levels in real time gave them confidence in what they were doing. 鈥淭he alarm settings warned them if their glucose levels dropped too low, and the time in range reports gave their GPs clear information on how they were progressing. It’s been a game-changer!” Ms Cain said investing in diabetes technologies will improve both health and economic outcomes. 鈥淩esearch shows that these devices are game-changing in terms of managing glucose levels and improving time-in-range, which ultimately reduces diabetes complications and hospitalisations,鈥 she said. 鈥淎 study of CGM use in the UK found an 86% reduction in paramedic callouts and a 62% reduction in hospital admissions from hypoglycaemia. 鈥淚f we can reduce the number of people living with diabetes experiencing complications like stroke, heart attack, blindness and kidney disease 鈥 we could reduce the economic burden on our health system by billions of dollars each year. 鈥淭his would also significantly improve the lives of people living with diabetes.鈥
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