Diabetes causes more than 180 amputations in the UK every week. But many are preventable with the right care. And our research has been at the forefront of driving foot care forward.
We helped set up the UK's first diabetic foot clinic
In 1981, we helped King’s College Hospital set up the UK’s first diabetes foot clinic. Bringing together the skills of chiropodists, shoe-fitters, nurses, doctors and surgeons, to offer specialised and urgent care to people with diabetes and foot problems for the first time.
Within three years, the number of major amputations halved.
Professor Michael Edmonds, King’s College Hospital, pioneered the first diabetes foot clinic there. He said:
Maria Niemis, who lives with type 2 diabetes, said:
Preventing amputations in the future
We’ve carried on backing fresh thinking in our search for better ways to prevent and treat foot problems.
With our funding, in 2018, Professor Neil Reeves showed that a ‘smart’ shoe insole system that raises an alarm if pressure to the feet reaches dangerous levels, can help prevent foot ulcers caused by diabetes by 70%. He’s now building the evidence needed to see this technology rolled out on the NHS.
In 2023, Professor Praveen Anand revealed that capsaicin – the molecule that gives chillis their fiery kick – can reduce foot pain and help reverse nerve damage. Something no other treatment can currently do.