Commentary

The benefits—and inequities—of improved diabetes care

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Although primary care doctors have always tried to accommodate the uninsured, the stark differences between new and old medicines now resembles a 2-tiered system. We can all celebrate advances in diabetes care and work hard to learn when and how to best use them, but those advances are accompanied by an uncomfortable awareness of the enormous inequity of prescribing regimens that haven't been considered best practice since the 1990s to patients who simply can’t afford better medicine.

We can expect amplified inequities in diabetes clinical outcomes to continue unless we develop a better system of distributing these life-changing medicines to those Americans who need them. Some state legislatures have made progress by supporting limited access to affordable insulin. However, ensuring that all patients with diabetes have access to modern insulin and effective medications is a national responsibility that needs a national response. Universal access to the modern tools of basic health care is a long-overdue treatment for an expanding epidemic of inequity.

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