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Novo Nordisk’s Changing Diabetes in Children programme extended by three years

Posted: 14 April 2015 |

The Changing Diabetes in Children programme, a scheme that has provided free insulin to 13,000 children since 2009, has been extended by three years.

Novo Nordisk has announced a three-year extension of its Changing Diabetes® in Children programme.

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Since 2009, free insulin and access to diabetes care have been provided to more than 13,000 children in nine countries in Africa and South-East Asia. During the five years, 108 diabetes clinics have been established and 5,479 healthcare professionals have received diabetes care training.

A child in sub-Saharan Africa diagnosed with type 1 diabetes often has a life expectancy of less than a year. As a response to this situation and as a call to action by the International Diabetes Federation, Novo Nordisk established the Changing Diabetes in Children programme. Being part of the programme means that each child receives insulin free of charge along with strips and a glucometer to measure their blood sugar levels. Patient education for children and families and training of healthcare personnel is also an essential part of the programme.

The idea originated from a visit to a district hospital in Kenya by Lars Rebien Sørensen, CEO of Novo Nordisk. At the hospital, he met a Masai boy diagnosed with type 1 diabetes who had been deserted by his parents at a highway and taken to the hospital by some passers-by. “It became clear to me that this boy had dire perspectives for staying alive,” says Lars Rebien Sørensen. “This is obviously hugely disturbing to anyone that has any way of influencing the situation.”

400 children have enrolled in Changing Diabetes in Children in Guinea alone

In Guinea, almost 400 children have been enrolled in the programme: “Before we had the programme for children with diabetes in Guinea, the situation was very difficult. Many children diagnosed with diabetes had no access to treatment or stopped it because their parents could not afford buying insulin,” explains Professor Naby Baldé, project partner at Donka University Hospital in Conakry, Guinea. “It’s a great progress for the children and their families; they will no longer have to choose between providing food for the family or treatment of one child.”

The Changing Diabetes in Children programme will run until 2017 in order to consolidate the work that has been done and to strengthen the sustainability of the programme in each country.

For more information about Novo Nordisk, please visit www.novonordisk.com.

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