As a payer, you face rising costs from diabetes and its complications, along with pressure to improve quality, close care gaps, and meet HEDIS/Stars requirements. Every year, diabetes costs in the U.S. total $306 billion in direct medical expenses and $106.3 billion in lost productivity cost to employers from absenteeism, presenteeism, disability, and premature mortality.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-recognized National Diabetes Prevention Program (National DPP) lifestyle change program has proven it can reduce diabetes incidence by 58% (71% for those 60 and older)—but payers need more than evidence. You need a prevention strategy that is scalable, measurable, and aligned to your value-based contracts.
That’s why the Diabetes Prevention Alliance (DPA) of the American Diabetes Association® (ADA) exists. We bring together delivery organizations, health care professionals, and employers under a framework designed for payers: diabetes prevention that is compliant, integrated, and proven to deliver return on investment.