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Diabetes
Insulin Guidelines for Diabetes Launched
India's first premix insulin guideline on the sidelines
of 64th annual conference of Association of Physicians of India, APICON-2009
in Greater Noida
Heralding a new dawn in diabetes management, Indian guidelines on insulin therapy
for Primary Care Physicians (PCPs) was launched on the sidelines of APICON 2009
at Greater Noida. This guideline is the first-of-its-kind insulin therapy guideline
formulated by 27 experts (Indian National Consensus Group) comprising diabetologists,
physicians and endocrinologists across India, and is part of the special issue
of JAPI (Journal of Associations of Physicians in India) 2009.
Till date, there were no specific guidelines in insulin therapy for the Indian
diaspora. The western guidelines (the only ones that are in force) rarely get
implemented in countries like India and China. Hence, the panel of experts on
the Indian National Consensus Group discussed and defined the problem of insulin
usage in primary care in India.
A recommendation was then made based on evidences and clinical experience following
which a primary draft was shared with 250 diabetologists and physicians across
the country for their review, before arriving at the final guideline. Some of
the key opinion leaders who played an important role in drafting the guidelines
include Dr Ashok Kumar Das, Dr AK Jhingan, Dr Seshiah and Dr Shashank Joshi.
The premix guideline will now arm a primary care physician with a simple algorithm
that can be implemented.
The guideline aims to give insights in to:
- Insulin therapy - premix insulin as the optimal
choice.
- Rationale for using premix insulin therapy in India.
- Evidences supporting premix insulin - initiation
and titration of premix insulin.
- Evaluation of modern premix insulin and human premix.
- Premix insulin in special situations, etc.
These much-needed guidelines will empower physicians with a simple and doable
algorithm for starting and treating with insulin therapy," said Dr AK Das,
Medical Superintendent, JIPMER, Puducherry and one of the members of The National
Consensus Group.
"The insulin guideline will immensely help in reducing the huge burden
of mortality and morbidity caused by uncontrolled hyperglycemia," commented
Dr A K Jhingan, Chairman, Delhi Diabetes Research Centres.
The guidelines have been published in the Journal of Associations of Physicians
in India (JAPI, January 2009 issue). On the occasion of the release of special
issue of JAPI, Dr Shashank Joshi, Endocrinologist at Lilavati Hospital and Bhatia
Hospital, Mumbai, raised concerns on the use of biosimilars and said, "There
are concerns about safety, efficacy and quality of biosimilars due to the absence
of stringent guidelines for evaluating these products in our regulatory system.
It was imperative to have these guidelines for the efficient management of diabetes
in India."
EH News Bureau
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