The HIGH Levels of un-diagnosis of Coeliac Disease in Australia, America & UK!
Gluten Free Foods are made for people who are coeliac or gluten intolerant. Because symptoms are so diverse this disease often goes undetected and undiagnosed by Doctors. But first you may be interested in what the odds are that you may have the disease and not know it. Or why it took so long for you to be diagnosed.
In Australia the coeliac society states that 1% of the population has coeliac disease. Although they suggest that only 20% of these people have been diagnosed. (ref 1). The Australian Gastroenterology institute states that in Australia the diagnosis level is somewhere between one in 500 to one in 2000 people (ref 4). Taking the higher level of 20% diagnosis, this means that in Australia (population 21,550,000, Jan 2009) that 215,000 people are most likely coeliac but 170,000 people don't know it. Note that gluten intolerant people may increase the amount of people seeking Gluten Free solutions by a factor of three or four times the Total Coeliac values.
|
Location
|
Population
|
Total Coeliacs
|
Diagnosed Celiacs
|
|
Melbourne
|
3.81 million
|
38,000
|
7,600
|
|
Sydney
|
4.34 million
|
43,000
|
8,600
|
|
Brisbane
|
1.007 million
|
10,000
|
2,000
|
|
Adelaide
|
1.16 million
|
11,000
|
2,200
|
|
Perth
|
555,000
|
5,500
|
3,100
|
|
Tasmania
|
493,300
|
5,000
|
1,000
|
|
Darwin
|
117,400
|
1,200
|
240
|
|
ACT
|
339,900
|
3,400
|
680
|
In December 2008, the top 200 search terms on Google Australia, related to gluten free products was 470,000 searches. With 79% internet usage and 65% Google share, this converts to an estimated 911,000 searches per month. If there are only 35,000 diagnosed coeliacs (20% of total coeliacs) in Australia this would mean that they perform 26 searches each per month each!
As the 1 in 100 statistic takes into account coeliac babies, the elderly and people who do not use the internet (but have access) the number of coeliacs actually searching is less than those diagnosed. So the ones that actually search perform an even higher search than the average estimated. But 26 searches per month (or higher) by coeliacs is most likely unrealistically high. It is more likely that this number is reduced by the searches performed by gluten free businesses and gluten intolerant people.
At the Melbourne gluten free shown in October 2008 approximately 10,000 people attended over three days. Yet from the above estimates, only about 8,000 people in Melbourne are diagnosed coeliacs. Empirically (from our stand at the show) it is likely that family members without CD and ‘gluten intolerant' people may have made up to 80% of the visitors to the show. If this is the case, then the number of diagnosed coeliac people online searches each month should be reduced by about 80% to account for gluten intolerant people and business searches. This reduces diagnosed celiac to 26 x 20% = 5.2 searches per month.
This value agrees with The Global GFP Matrix article on this site, that using Google data estimates the Australian adjusted celiac searches per month at 4.2 searchers per month. The e-demand of various countries is plotted (below) against a country's 'GDP per person' value to show a logaritmic relationship exists between demand and wealth. Higher wealth also most likely being associated with higher diagnosis.
AMERICAN "Celiac Disease" diagnosis rate
One references estimates that "1 in 133 people in the US have celiac disease" It also cites a study that was conducted to "assess the number of undiagnosed cases of celiac disease due to a lack of awareness and inadequate training among primary care physicians. Researchers found that when doctors tested all of their patients with symptoms associated with celiac disease the diagnostic rate increases 32- to 43-fold" (ref 6).
"The projected number of people in the United States with celiac disease could be as high as three million, yet only a small fraction of these cases has been correctly diagnosed and treated". (ref 6)
Another article written in 2004 suggests that the average time from symptoms to diagnosis in America was ten years. It cites variances in the number of coeliacs (diagnosed and undiagnosed) in difference countries - Italy celiac disease is suggested to be as 1 in 250 people, while Ireland only 1 in 300 people. However it is "estimated that only one in 4,700 people in America are actually diagnosed with celiac disease. Yet according to evidence researched by the NIH report, prevalence may be as high as 1 in 105 people!"(ref 7). This would suggest that five years ago that only 2.2% of celiacs were diagnosed in America.
This lower level of diagnosis could be the reason that in a previous articles on the gluten free pages site estimated adjusted coeliac searches in America at 2.7 searches per coeliac per month - much less than Australia's value of 4.2.
UK celiac diagnosis level
In the GFP Global Matrix article, The UK was estimated to have a coeliac search value of 2.2 searches per coeliac per month, which while lower than America and Australia is still well ahead of Germany (0.3), France (0.8) and Italy (0.9).
One reference estimates that "at least 1 in 100 people in the UK suffers from coeliac disease. However, only 12.5% of people with the disease are actually being correctly diagnosed. Recent research showed that the average length of time taken for someone to be diagnosed with coeliac disease from the onset of their symptoms is 13 years. (ref 8)
All of these facts suggest a massive global under-diagnosis of celiac disease. Other original articles on this site suggest that the long term symptoms of this disease greatly distroy the quality of life for those who acquire it. Fast and accurate diagnosis is critical, and if you suspect that you suffer from some of the symptoms, diagnosing or ruling out the disease is vital. Please see our article on Symptoms and our article on Diagnosis options if you believe you may need help.

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Article by Bruce Dwyer - GoLeftfield Marketing - Market Analyst and SEO Expert
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References
ref 1 http://www.coeliacsociety.com.au/aware.html
ref 2 http://www.coeliac.com.au/coeliac-disease-introduction.html
ref 3 http://www.jolimontendoscopy.com.au/gi-diseases.php
ref 4 http://www.nevdgp.org.au/info/gastro/coeliac.htm
ref 5 http://americanceliac.org/diagnosis.htm
ref 6 http://www.naturalnews.com/022346.html
ref 7 http://www.healthandage.com/public/health-center/15/article/2909/Undiagnosed-Celiac-Disease.html
ref 8 http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/103711.php |