Sat, 13 Jun 2026
Headlines:
Diabetes educators needed to bridge the gap in diabetes care
Published on: Monday, June 08, 2026
Published on: Mon, Jun 08, 2026
Text Size:
Text:
Diabetes educators needed to bridge the gap in diabetes care
DIABETES has become one of Malaysia’s most pressing public health challenges. 

According to the National Health and Morbidity Survey (NHMS) 2023, 15.6% of Malaysian adults aged 18 and above are living with diabetes, roughly one in every six adults. Among those who have been diagnosed, 56% do not have their diabetes under adequate control. 

Advertisement
Every day, a person living with diabetes must make dozens of decisions: What to eat, when to exercise, how to interpret a blood sugar reading, when to adjust medication, and how to stay motivated when managing the disease. 

Effective diabetes management depends on sustained behavioural change, and informed self-management. Structured diabetes self-management education has been shown to improve glycaemic control, reduce the risk of complications, lower hospitalisation rates, and significantly enhance quality of life. 

A diabetes educator is a healthcare professional who has been specially trained to support people living with diabetes through education, counselling, and personalised self-management strategies. 

Diabetes educators come from a wide range of clinical disciplines including medicine, nursing, dietetics, pharmacy, physiotherapy, podiatry, clinical psychology, bringing a multidisciplinary perspective to patient care.

Advertisement
However, in Malaysia, the ratio of trained diabetes educators to people living with diabetes remains critically low. 

Training opportunities have historically been insufficient, with few institutions offering diabetes educator training at a recognised qualification level. This gap has very real consequences: patients who could benefit from structured education and support are instead left to manage alone.

Advertisement
The Postgraduate Diploma in Diabetes Management and Education (PGDME) programme at IMU University was designed precisely to address this gap.

It is the highest qualification of its kind in Southeast Asia, modelled against international curriculum guidelines and delivered through Open and Distance Learning (ODL) mode that allows working healthcare professionals to upskill without interrupting their practice. 

The programme equips graduates with competencies across diabetes pathophysiology, self-management education, psychosocial support, care of special populations, and research, preparing them not just to teach patients, but to lead diabetes care at institutional and national levels.

MDES Conference 2026: A Platform for Diabetes Educators 

From 15 to 17 May 2026, the Malaysian Diabetes Educators Society (MDES) brought together healthcare professionals, researchers, and advocates at the MDES Conference 2026, held at Four Points by Sheraton, Puchong, Selangor. 

Under the theme “Diabetes Care: Bridging Practice, Technology, and Patient Empowerment,” the conference served as one of the most important annual gatherings for the diabetes educator community in Malaysia.

PGDME faculty including Dr Tan Min Yeong (also the Vice President of the MDES), Dr Lee Ching Li, Prof Winnie Chee Siew Swee, Dr Farah Yasmin Hasbullah, and Dr Hariyati Sharima took to the stage as speakers, contributing to discussions on nutrition therapy, lifestyle management, effective communication in diabetes care, addressing psychosocial issues, and the evolving role of technology in patient empowerment. 

PGDME students found the conference provided a chance to contextualise what they were learning within the broader national conversation on diabetes care.

“Attending MDES 2026 as a PGDME student reinforced understanding that effective diabetes education goes beyond the numbers or logbook entries, but instead empowering patients to make sustainable behavioural and lifestyle changes that improve self-management and long-term health outcomes,” said Jasminder Kaur A/P Puguan Singh, Clinical Nurse Case Management, from DMEO325 cohort. 

This was echoed by Melinda Chin Tze Lin, Clinical Nurse Case Management, also from DMEO325 cohort, “Beyond numbers and glucose levels lies a human story that deserves to be heard.

When we become partners in care, not just providers of instruction, we give patients something greater than knowledge – we give them confidence, dignity, and hope, one day at a time.”

Diabetes Education: The Road Ahead

As Malaysia’s diabetes burden continues to rise, the need for skilled, compassionate, and well-trained diabetes educators becomes not just important but also urgent. 

Diabetes educators who can bridge the space between clinical knowledge and lived patient experience are among the most valuable assets in the healthcare system. 

For healthcare professionals who believe that patient education is as powerful as any prescription, the PGDME programme offers a pathway to make that belief their practice.

The next commencement of this programme is in July. If you are interested to enrol into this programme, make an online application today.  

For more information, please refer to www.imu.edu.my or email: start@imu.edu.my or call IMU at 03 - 2731 7272.
Advertisement
Share this story
Advertisement
Advertisement
Follow Us  
           
Daily Express News  
© Copyright 2026 Sabah Publishing House Sdn. Bhd. (Co. No. 35782-P)
close
Try 1 month for RM 18.00
Already a subscriber? Login here
Try 1 month for RM 18.00
open
Try 1 month for RM 18.00
Already a subscriber? Login here