From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Diabetes UK
British charity
British charity
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Diabetes UK |
| logo | DiabetesUKlogo.gif |
| logo_alt | Diabetes UK logo |
| former_name | The Diabetic Association (1934-1954), British Diabetic Association (1954-2000) |
| type | Charity |
| foundation | 1934 |
| location | Wells Lawrence House, 126 Back Church Lane, London, E1 1FH |
| num_locations | 7 including, London, Glasgow, Cardiff, Belfast, Warrington, Wolverhampton, and Taunton |
| founder | H. G. Wells, Robert Daniel Lawrence |
| key_people | Colette Marshall (CEO) 2023-present, |
| website |
Chris Askew (CEO) 2015-2023 Diabetes UK is a British-based patient, healthcare professional and research charity that has been described as "one of the foremost diabetes charities in the UK". The charity campaigns for improvements in the care and treatment of people with diabetes.
History
Diabetes UK was founded in 1934 as The Diabetic Association, by the author H. G. Wells and Robert Daniel Lawrence. Diabetes UK's first research grant was made in 1936. The organisation has since had two name changes—in 1954 to The British Diabetic Association and again in June 2000 to Diabetes UK.
Both founders were living with diabetes, and their aim was to make sure that everyone in the UK had access to insulin, regardless of their financial situation.
In 1999, the charity reviewed its services for people in their 20s to 40s, hoping to get more of that age group involved; at the time, 70% of younger people with diabetes were members but only 5% of people aged 20–40 with diabetes.
As of 2010, the charity's yearly income was £29,334,000.
Services
Research
Diabetes UK provides funding for United Kingdom-based research into the causes and treatment of diabetes and its complications.
The charity's first research grant was made in 1936, which led to a major discovery in how the liver produces glucose.
The charity provides financial support for "project grants, funding to purchase laboratory equipment, and research-training opportunities ranging from PhD studentships to research fellowships." The research they fund covers all areas of diabetes, and there have been significant breakthroughs for both Type 1 treatment and Type 2 prevention and remission. They continue to invest more in research in the hope that, one day, they will find a cure.
In 2011, the charity awarded £1,035,743 to five new research grants, and £440,051 to five new PhD studentships.
In 2017, they invested over £6.7 million in diabetes research and agreed to support 38 new studies.
Campaigns
Diabetes UK are at the forefront of the fight against diabetes. With the help of their supporters, they've run campaigns like the 4Ts to help raise awareness of the symptoms of Type 1 diabetes, made sure children get the care they need in schools with their Make the Grade campaign, fight for equality of care and treatment across the UK with their Flash campaign and are working to make the healthy choice the easy choice with their food labeling campaign.
Partnership
Diabetes UK work with a range of companies, trusts, foundations and philanthropists to help fund research breakthroughs and prevent Type 2 diabetes.
In 2008, Diabetes UK together with Association of British Clinical Diabetologists (ABCD) created the Joint British Diabetes Societies for Inpatient Care (JBDS-IP) group. The group generates guidelines for management of inpatient diabetes
In 2018, Diabetes UK began a new five-year strategic partnership with long-standing partner Tesco, alongside British Heart Foundation and Cancer Research UK, to tackle the UK's biggest health challenges through behaviour change.
Groups and Events
Diabetes UK has 330 local groups across the UK.
Conferences
The society runs conferences for people with diabetes, volunteers and healthcare professionals.
Telephone support services and helpline
In 1993, the organisation launched an information line for patients, family and friends.
Holidays
The charity has been providing holidays for children since the 1930s. Family and adult holidays have been introduced since.
Publications
Diabetes UK produces a range of information leaflets and booklets that help raise awareness of diabetes, and offer support and knowledge to help in prevention of Type 2 and management of all types of diabetes.
These include the magazine "Balance" (formerly The Diabetic Journal), first published in 1935, changing its name to Balance in 1961, and "Diabetes Update" for professionals.
Via John Wiley and Sons, Diabetes UK produces the academic journal, Diabetic Medicine.
The charity has also published practice guidelines for professionals.
Website
Diabetes UK website links people to clear information available for anyone who needs it. This includes healthcare professionals, parents, carers, and people living with diabetes. Their Learning Zone is an area where through sign up, people can gain access to personalised support and tips in diabetes management from peers.
Since 14 November 2008, the Diabetes UK site has hosted a forum. This was originally under the URL diabetessupport.co.uk. On the 13th of October 2015, the forum had a major makeover to make clear the DUK connection; this involved moving to a new URL (the DUK URL prefixed with "forum"), changing the board logo (including favicon) and colour scheme to match the main site, and upgrading to new forum software.
References
References
- Clive Petry. (2014-02-07). "Gestational Diabetes: Origins, Complications, and Treatment". CRC Press.
- (15 February 2014). "HG Wells: The first celebrity charity campaigner?". BBC News.
- ''In the beginning…'' - J. Mace, 1994. ''Balance'', Feb–Mar: 8–14.
- (2004). "British Diabetic Association review of the AIDA v4 diabetes software simulator program". Diabetes Technol Ther..
- John Keeler. (14 May 2004). "Living Life with Diabetes". John Wiley & Sons.
- (7 April 1999). "Active service". The Guardian.
- "Britain's top 1,000 charities ranked by donations. Who raises the most money?". The Guardian.
- (7 August 2019). "Getting Diabetes Support from Diabetes UK - Well Heeled".
- "Diabetes research {{!".
- "Our research projects {{!".
- "Joint British Diabetes Societies (JBDS) for Inpatient Care Group {{!}} ABCD (Diabetes Care) Ltd".
- "Joint British Diabetes Societies for Inpatient care".
- (2020). "Our Story: Annual report and accounts 2019".
- ''Who cares? We do.'' - R. French, 2004. ''Balance'', July–Aug: 47–48
- (1 August 1994). "Appeals: British Diabetic Association launch new campaign". The Independent.
- (1999). "Diabetic camps — who benefits?". Current Paediatrics.
- Jessica Datta. (4 April 2001). "Moving up with Diabetes: The transition from paediatric to adult care". JKP.
- ''Give us a break!'' - G. Hood, 1994. ''Balance'', Feb–Mar: 82–83.
- Trisha Dunning. (15 April 2008). "Nursing Care of Older People with Diabetes". John Wiley & Sons.
- https://forum.diabetes.org.uk/boards/threads/forum-10-years-on-how-it-all-began.75684/ {{User-generated source. (August 2022)
- https://forum.diabetes.org.uk/boards/threads/forum-upgrade-important-news.55408/ {{User-generated source. (August 2022)
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Diabetes UK — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report