PHI with juvenile diabetes (type 1 diabetes mellitus)
How does this condition affect your private health insurance?
Jugenddiabetes, officially known as Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus, is a chronic autoimmune condition primarily affecting children and young adults, though it can occur at any age. It results from the body's immune system mistakenly attacking and destroying the insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas. This leads to an absolute deficiency of insulin, a hormone essential for glucose uptake by cells, causing high blood sugar levels. Symptoms include excessive thirst, frequent urination, unexplained weight loss, and fatigue. Management involves lifelong insulin therapy, often via injections or an insulin pump, alongside careful dietary management and regular blood glucose monitoring to prevent acute complications like ketoacidosis and long-term issues like cardiovascular disease, neuropathy, and kidney damage.
PKV Risk Assessment
Individual, specialized PHI providers may still insure you, but with a significant surcharge.
Impact on Your Insurance Policy
Duration of Illness (Initial)
Typically acute to subacute, developing over days to several weeks before diagnosis.
Duration of Illness (Lifetime)
Chronic, lifelong condition requiring continuous management.
Cost of Treatment (Initial)
High, involving emergency care, diagnosis, initial hospitalization, insulin, and education; typically several thousands of USD.
Cost of Treatment (Lifetime)
Very high, encompassing lifelong insulin, monitoring supplies (e.g., test strips, CGM), pump supplies, specialist consultations, and managing potential complications; potentially hundreds of thousands to over a million USD.
Mortality Rate
Low with proper treatment and management, but elevated if untreated (nearly 100%) or due to severe acute complications like DKA, or long-term cardiovascular disease (overall 2-3 times higher mortality risk than general population).
Risk of Secondary Damages
Very high (over 50% within decades) without optimal glycemic control, including cardiovascular disease, nephropathy (kidney disease), retinopathy (eye disease), neuropathy (nerve damage), and psychological distress.
Probability of Full Recovery
Extremely low; as the destruction of beta cells is largely irreversible, no current cure exists.
Underlying Disease Risk
Moderate to high (10-30%) for other autoimmune conditions such as celiac disease, thyroid disorders (Hashimoto's thyroiditis, Graves' disease), Addison's disease, and pernicious anemia.