Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:
To ask His Majesty's Government whether NHS England plans to add a mental health assessment as an annual care check for people with type 1 diabetes.
The National Diabetes Audit is the primary mechanism for collecting data in England on the care and outcomes of people living with diabetes, helping to inform healthcare practice and policy.
The National Diabetes Audit could serve as a registry for type 1 diabetes with disordered eating (T1DE) in the future. An agreed definition of T1DE supported by National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) will be important to enable diagnosis, data recording, and establishing data collection processes.
NHS England works closely with NICE to understand emerging areas for consideration in national guidance and has committed to sharing the current pilot site evaluation outcomes, when available, with NICE to ensure findings are considered in the development of future guidance.
The National Health Service does not currently have any plans to introduce a mental health assessment to the annual care check for people with type 1 diabetes or to embed mental health support into all diabetes clinics to provide emotional wellbeing for people with type 1 diabetes. NICE is responsible for producing clinical guidelines and quality standards for diabetes care.
The current NICE guideline for type 1 diabetes diagnosis and management, a copy of which is attached, states that members of diabetes professional teams should be alert to the symptoms of depression and anxiety, have the appropriate skills to provide basic management, and arrange prompt referral to specialists where an individual’s mental health interferes significantly with their wellbeing or self-management.
NHS England works in close partnership with national charities and organisations that support people living with type 1 diabetes, including by facilitating and supporting peer support opportunities.
For example, NHS England has collaborated with Diabetes UK, Breakthrough Type 1 Diabetes, and people with lived experience to produce The Six Principles of Good Peer Support for People Living with Type 1 Diabetes statement, which aims to promote the standards required for peer support to both clinicians and to those who are looking to access peer support opportunities. Further information on the statement is available on the NHS.UK website, in an online only format.
Diabetes UK also runs the Together Type 1 Programme which aims to create a supportive environment where young people can connect with others who understand the challenges of living with type 1 diabetes. Further information is available on the Together Type 1 Programme on Diabetes UK’s website, in an online only format. Diabetes UK also has a network of regional teams that facilitate local peer support groups and activities.