Le Lézard
Classified in: Health
Subjects: LAW/LEGAL ISSUES, HEALTH, FOOD/COOKING, LIFESTYLE, MISCELLANEOUS

STATE OF CELIAC DISEASE IN CANADA - UNDERDIAGNOSED, UNAFFORDABLE AND UNSAFE FOOD: SURVEY


TORONTO, ON., Feb. 28, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- February 28th, Toronto. Twenty years after the first comprehensive survey of Canadians living with celiac disease, new results show the condition remains largely underdiagnosed, the gluten-free diet is often unaffordable, and many risk being exposed to unsafe food.

"Sadly, the biggest challenges haven't improved in twenty years ? like getting people with celiac disease properly diagnosed early, and ensuring they're able to afford gluten-free foods that won't do them harm," explains Melissa Secord, National Executive Director of Celiac Canada, which funded the survey "State of Celiac Disease in Canada: 20 Years Later."

"Celiac disease is a common genetic disorder that affects about one percent of the world's population, but up to 80% still don't even know they have it. So, they're living with painful, life-disrupting symptoms and unwittingly causing themselves harm. For those who have been diagnosed, the unaffordable cost of gluten-free foods often means having to skip meals, change the food they purchase or make sacrifices in other areas of their spending."

Celiac disease is an auto-immune condition triggered by ingesting gluten (a naturally occurring protein) in grains such as wheat, rye and barley. The body attacks itself, damaging the small intestine and resulting in malabsorption of vital nutrients. Damage can lead to a variety of over 260 possible gastrointestinal and extraintestinal symptoms; the top ?non-gut' symptoms are now neurological such as anxiety (58.9%), brain fog (57.4%) and headaches and migraines (52.6%). Long delays in diagnosis can cause co-morbidities and early death from complications.

Celiac Canada surveyed 7,500 Canadians with celiac disease on topics like what symptoms they experience, how long they went before being diagnosed, and how they manage living with the disease (eating challenges in social settings, the availability and cost of gluten-free food, and the psycho-social challenges of managing celiac disease).

Among the key findings of the survey:

What can be done to help Canadians living with celiac disease?

1. MORE DIAGNOSIS, FASTER

2. HELP WITH THE HIGH COST OF GLUTEN-FREE FOODS

3. ENSURE AVAILABILITY OF SAFE FOODS OUTSIDE THE HOME

READ FULL SURVEY  https://www.celiac.ca/state-of-celiac

ABOUT CELIAC CANADA

Since 1972, Celiac Canada (CCA) has been the only national charity championing how to find, treat & cure celiac disease so people can safely manage their lifelong gluten-free journey.  A united hub for the best medical, lifestyle and policy solutions that improve your access to safe gluten-free food, standards of care & world-class education/research. CCA changes minds, hearts, laws & lives.

ADDITIONAL QUOTES

ACCESS TO SAFE FOOD
Linda Sill, Kitchener, ON, whose mother was in long-term residential care. 
"What management told me was not what was happening in the kitchen.  Mom was becoming increasingly ill and very weak. She had many of the signs of constant gluten contamination. She developed failure of her full digestive tract and was placed in intensive care.  In less than one year in care homes, the damage was too extensive, and she passed away a few weeks later".  

TIME TO DIAGNOSIS
Sonia Pereira, Vancouver, BC, for whom diagnosis took nearly five years.  
"The first time my face went numb, I was misdiagnosed at a small hospital ? Stroke. Then after every test known to man - I was told it was migraines. Then I tested positive for meningitis, I didn't have meningitis. Then I started breaking out in sores ? clearly it was an infectious disease (it wasn't). When I lost 50lbs in 2 months it was cancer. Then Lyme, then this, then that, then...I quickly became a medical mystery. My neurologist wrote to my GP saying I wasn't to see another specialist (I'd seen 10+) until I saw a psychiatrist." Sonia was eventually correctly diagnosed by a new young doctor.

AFFORDABILITY
Stephanie Fleming, Sarnia, ON, on disability so relies on food banks. "There have been times I have left with nothing I could eat and other times I have left with a small gift card which is the best possible outcome for me, although staff act like I'm just after a gift card and do not realize it's because I can't have the other options. They think it's like choosing keto or being vegetarian."   

PROVINCIAL INTERVIEWEES AVAILABLE ON REQUEST.

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