What’s New

Click here to access our 2009 Alberta Diabetes Atlas, released on November 12, 2009.  The Atlas contains information on the number of people living with diabetes in Alberta, their related health conditions, and the health services they use.  New sections include: health care utilization costs of diabetes to the health system, as well as epidemiological trends for children and adolescents.

 

Click here to view our latest newsletter entitled ‘Health Care Costs for Children and Adults with Diabetes by Alberta Health Zone ’.  In it, we have profiled health care costs for people with diabetes across Alberta's five health zones.

 

The Public Health Agency of Canada recently announced that the ADSS team will receive a second year of funding to continue its active dissemination efforts. The ADSS team's activities include providing primary care network visits, community specific data for evaluation and planning, and continued development of its interactive website, which will launch later this year.

 

We have recently created a figure that highlights diabetes prevalence in different  Alberta communities.  It’s interesting to note the Alberta communities with the highest and lowest prevalence.  Click here to see more.


About the Alberta Diabetes
Surveillance System

As a key component of the Alberta Diabetes Strategy 2003-2013, the Alberta Diabetes Surveillance System (ADSS) was created in order to disseminate information on the incidence, prevalence and mortality of diabetes and its complications and comorbidities in Alberta. The Institute of Health Economics (IHE) and ACHORD are working closely with the Population Health Strategies and Surveillance Branches to produce this timely, comprehensive, standardized database for diabetes surveillance in Alberta. The ADSS is lead by Dr. Johnson and other ACHORD Investigators in addition to a number of collaborators from across Alberta with clinical and research backgrounds.

The ADSS will build on the National Diabetes Surveillance System, which all provinces and territories already participate in. The ADSS would enhance that basic activity to produce an Alberta Diabetes Atlas, as well as an interactive website that would provide more timely information to health regions. The Atlas would report on diabetes patterns as well as compare health care utilization for people with and without diabetes in Alberta. Specific comorbidities and complications that will be reported on include diabetes and cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, mental health and eye disease. This information could then be compared across health regions and provide a population health perspective on the overall care and management of diabetes within the province. The Alberta Diabetes Atlas will be produced every two years, with the first released in spring 2007.

The ADSS will provide a measurement system against which many of the objectives of the Alberta Diabetes Strategy can be assessed. The establishment of the ADSS is just another way that the ACHORD group continues to collaborate with policy decision makers to ensure the translation of research into enhanced quality of care for individuals with diabetes in Alberta.

International Diabetes Surveillance

Rates of diabetes are increasing world-wide, especially in developed Westernized countries, and quantifying the diabetes burden in a descriptive epidemiological fashion is often the first step to understanding the determinants of the disease from a population-based perspective.  Diabetes surveillance is important in order to:

  • Monitor trends in diabetes indicators (including diabetes-related risk factors and complications) over time;
  • Assess the public health burden of diabetes;
  • Identify high risk groups;
  • Assist in the development of targeted health promotion strategies;
  • Assist in the formulation of targeted health care policy;
  • Evaluate the progress in prevention and management of diabetes and diabetes-related complications.

Below are some links to different websites from North America, including Canada, that have surveillance systems or registries in place to monitor the increase of diabetes and its complications.  Stay tuned for other international diabetes surveillance websites that will be added to this list:

Canada

http://www.phac-aspc.gc.ca/ccdpc-cpcmc/diabetes-diabete/english/ndss/index.html

United States

http://www.cdc.gov/diabetes/statistics

 

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