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Overcoming Therapeutic Inertia as the Achilles’ Heel for Improving Suboptimal Diabetes Care: An Integrative Review

The ultimate purpose of diabetes care is achieving the outcomes that patients regard as important throughout the life course. Despite advances in pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals, psychoeducational programs, information technologies, and digital health, the levels of treatment target achievement in p...

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Autores principales: Chew, Boon-How, Mohd-Yusof, Barakatun-Nisak, Lai, Pauline Siew Mei, Khunti, Kamlesh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Korean Endocrine Society 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10008655/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36792353
http://dx.doi.org/10.3803/EnM.2022.1649
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author Chew, Boon-How
Mohd-Yusof, Barakatun-Nisak
Lai, Pauline Siew Mei
Khunti, Kamlesh
author_facet Chew, Boon-How
Mohd-Yusof, Barakatun-Nisak
Lai, Pauline Siew Mei
Khunti, Kamlesh
author_sort Chew, Boon-How
collection PubMed
description The ultimate purpose of diabetes care is achieving the outcomes that patients regard as important throughout the life course. Despite advances in pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals, psychoeducational programs, information technologies, and digital health, the levels of treatment target achievement in people with diabetes mellitus (DM) have remained suboptimal. This clinical care of people with DM is highly challenging, complex, costly, and confounded for patients, physicians, and healthcare systems. One key underlying problem is clinical inertia in general and therapeutic inertia (TI) in particular. TI refers to healthcare providers’ failure to modify therapy appropriately when treatment goals are not met. TI therefore relates to the prescribing decisions made by healthcare professionals, such as doctors, nurses, and pharmacists. The known causes of TI include factors at the level of the physician (50%), patient (30%), and health system (20%). Although TI is often multifactorial, the literature suggests that 28% of strategies are targeted at multiple levels of causes, 38% at the patient level, 26% at the healthcare professional level, and only 8% at the healthcare system level. The most effective interventions against TI are shorter intervals until revisit appointments and empowering nurses, diabetes educators, and pharmacists to review treatments and modify prescriptions.
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spelling pubmed-100086552023-03-13 Overcoming Therapeutic Inertia as the Achilles’ Heel for Improving Suboptimal Diabetes Care: An Integrative Review Chew, Boon-How Mohd-Yusof, Barakatun-Nisak Lai, Pauline Siew Mei Khunti, Kamlesh Endocrinol Metab (Seoul) Review Article The ultimate purpose of diabetes care is achieving the outcomes that patients regard as important throughout the life course. Despite advances in pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals, psychoeducational programs, information technologies, and digital health, the levels of treatment target achievement in people with diabetes mellitus (DM) have remained suboptimal. This clinical care of people with DM is highly challenging, complex, costly, and confounded for patients, physicians, and healthcare systems. One key underlying problem is clinical inertia in general and therapeutic inertia (TI) in particular. TI refers to healthcare providers’ failure to modify therapy appropriately when treatment goals are not met. TI therefore relates to the prescribing decisions made by healthcare professionals, such as doctors, nurses, and pharmacists. The known causes of TI include factors at the level of the physician (50%), patient (30%), and health system (20%). Although TI is often multifactorial, the literature suggests that 28% of strategies are targeted at multiple levels of causes, 38% at the patient level, 26% at the healthcare professional level, and only 8% at the healthcare system level. The most effective interventions against TI are shorter intervals until revisit appointments and empowering nurses, diabetes educators, and pharmacists to review treatments and modify prescriptions. Korean Endocrine Society 2023-02 2023-02-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10008655/ /pubmed/36792353 http://dx.doi.org/10.3803/EnM.2022.1649 Text en Copyright © 2023 Korean Endocrine Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Chew, Boon-How
Mohd-Yusof, Barakatun-Nisak
Lai, Pauline Siew Mei
Khunti, Kamlesh
Overcoming Therapeutic Inertia as the Achilles’ Heel for Improving Suboptimal Diabetes Care: An Integrative Review
title Overcoming Therapeutic Inertia as the Achilles’ Heel for Improving Suboptimal Diabetes Care: An Integrative Review
title_full Overcoming Therapeutic Inertia as the Achilles’ Heel for Improving Suboptimal Diabetes Care: An Integrative Review
title_fullStr Overcoming Therapeutic Inertia as the Achilles’ Heel for Improving Suboptimal Diabetes Care: An Integrative Review
title_full_unstemmed Overcoming Therapeutic Inertia as the Achilles’ Heel for Improving Suboptimal Diabetes Care: An Integrative Review
title_short Overcoming Therapeutic Inertia as the Achilles’ Heel for Improving Suboptimal Diabetes Care: An Integrative Review
title_sort overcoming therapeutic inertia as the achilles’ heel for improving suboptimal diabetes care: an integrative review
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10008655/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36792353
http://dx.doi.org/10.3803/EnM.2022.1649
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