N.Y.C. To Watch Diabetes Cases *** Monitoring Raises Privacy Issues
Posted on: Friday, 30 December 2005, 12:00 CST
By DAVID B. CARUSO
N.Y.C. to watch diabetes cases *** Monitoring raises privacy issues
NEW YORK Hoping to save hundreds of lives, New York adopted a health-code regulation Wednesday that will make it the first American city to keep track of people with diabetes in much the same way it does with patients infected with HIV or tuberculosis.
The city will occasionally use its database to prod diabetics to take better care of themselves.
The policy breaks new ground because it involves the collection of information about people who have a disease that is neither contagious nor caused by an environmental toxin.
It has also raised privacy concerns in some quarters.
New Yorks health commissioner, Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, said the programs potential to save thousands of lives outweighs what it gives up in medical privacy.
We will ensure that the utmost care will be taken to keep peoples information protected, he said.
Under a revised city code passed by the Board of Health, most medical laboratories in New York will be required to electronically forward the results of thousands of blood-sugar tests to the city Health Department, which will then analyze the data to identify people having trouble controlling their diabetes.
Some patients might then get letters or phone calls from their doctors, prodding them to take medication, come in more frequently for checkups, or change their diet.
Diabetes is the fourth-leading cause of death in the city, but people who aggressively monitor their condition are less likely to develop fatal or debilitating symptoms, including blindness, kidney failure and heart problems.
When it was first proposed last summer, the program was greeted with a mixture of excitement and trepidation.
The American Diabetes Association said it thought the surveillance program could be of great value to patients and doctors, but also said the city should ask each person for permission before collecting and analyzing their blood tests.
Frieden said people skittish about their privacy will be allowed to opt out of the program.
Details on how that would work, however, are still being developed.
New Yorks first use of such a health registry came in the late 19th century as part of a battle against an epidemic of tuberculosis.
Since then, the list of illnesses reported to city officials has steadily expanded, but still consists mostly of contagious illnesses or ones with an environmental cause, such as food poisoning.
Frieden said diabetes status as a leading killer made it just as important to watch as any contagious disease.
Diabetes killed 1,891 New Yorkers in 2003, the last year for which figures were available.
Source: Advocate; Baton Rouge, La.
Related Articles
- ASPH Supports President Obama's Selection of New York City Health Commissioner Thomas R. Frieden, MD, MPH, for CDC Director
- Satyam Wins Consumer Health World Award for Tele-Ophthalmology Program
- New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg Announces Use of MINI E Electric Cars provided by BMW Group to City of New York in State of the City Speech
- Diabetes Online Health Guide Released on NHS Choices
- AMAC Executes Multi-Year Contract With City of New York, Human Resources Administration for the Provision of Personal Emergency Response Systems
- HIP Health Plan Launches New York City's First Health Plan to Address Diabetes Epidemic Among New York's Medicare Population
- Statement of the American Diabetes Association on the New York City Health Department's Proposal to Phase Out Artificial Trans Fat in All Restaurants
- New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg Proclaims Week of September 18 Interop Week in the City of New York
- City of New York Awards AT&T Major Services and Networking Contract
- New Study By the Youth Development Institute of the Fund for the City of New York
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds