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Factors Associated With Intensification of Oral Diabetes Medications in Primary Care Provider-Patient Dyads: A Cohort Study

OBJECTIVE—Although suboptimal glycemic control is known to be common in diabetic adults, few studies have evaluated factors at the level of the physician-patient encounter. Our objective was to identify novel visit-based factors associated with intensification of oral diabetes medications in diabeti...

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Autores principales: Bolen, Shari Danielle, Bricker, Eric, Samuels, T. Alafia, Yeh, Hsin-Chieh, Marinopoulos, Spyridon S., McGuire, Maura, Abuid, Marcela, Brancati, Frederick L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Diabetes Association 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2606824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18931096
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/dc08-1297
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author Bolen, Shari Danielle
Bricker, Eric
Samuels, T. Alafia
Yeh, Hsin-Chieh
Marinopoulos, Spyridon S.
McGuire, Maura
Abuid, Marcela
Brancati, Frederick L.
author_facet Bolen, Shari Danielle
Bricker, Eric
Samuels, T. Alafia
Yeh, Hsin-Chieh
Marinopoulos, Spyridon S.
McGuire, Maura
Abuid, Marcela
Brancati, Frederick L.
author_sort Bolen, Shari Danielle
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE—Although suboptimal glycemic control is known to be common in diabetic adults, few studies have evaluated factors at the level of the physician-patient encounter. Our objective was to identify novel visit-based factors associated with intensification of oral diabetes medications in diabetic adults. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We conducted a nonconcurrent prospective cohort study of 121 patients with type 2 diabetes and hyperglycemia (A1C ≥8%) enrolled in an academically affiliated managed-care program. Over a 24-month interval (1999–2001), we identified 574 hyperglycemic visits. We measured treatment intensification and factors associated with intensification at each visit. RESULTS—Provider-patient dyads intensified oral diabetes treatment in only 128 (22%) of 574 hyperglycemic visits. As expected, worse glycemia was an important predictor of intensification. Treatment was more likely to be intensified for patients with visits that were “routine” (odds ratio [OR] 2.55 [95% CI 1.49–4.38]), for patients taking two or more oral diabetes drugs (2.82 [1.74–4.56]), or for patients with longer intervals between visits (OR per 30 days 1.05 [1.00–1.10]). In contrast, patients with less recent A1C measurements (OR >30 days before the visit 0.53 [0.34–0.85]), patients with a higher number of prior visits (OR per prior visit 0.94 [0.88–1.00]), and African American patients (0.59 [0.35–1.00]) were less likely to have treatment intensified. CONCLUSIONS—Failure to intensify oral diabetes treatment is common in diabetes care. Quality improvement measures in type 2 diabetes should focus on overcoming inertia, improving continuity of care, and reducing racial disparities.
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spelling pubmed-26068242010-01-01 Factors Associated With Intensification of Oral Diabetes Medications in Primary Care Provider-Patient Dyads: A Cohort Study Bolen, Shari Danielle Bricker, Eric Samuels, T. Alafia Yeh, Hsin-Chieh Marinopoulos, Spyridon S. McGuire, Maura Abuid, Marcela Brancati, Frederick L. Diabetes Care Clinical Care/Education/Nutrition/Psychosocial Research OBJECTIVE—Although suboptimal glycemic control is known to be common in diabetic adults, few studies have evaluated factors at the level of the physician-patient encounter. Our objective was to identify novel visit-based factors associated with intensification of oral diabetes medications in diabetic adults. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—We conducted a nonconcurrent prospective cohort study of 121 patients with type 2 diabetes and hyperglycemia (A1C ≥8%) enrolled in an academically affiliated managed-care program. Over a 24-month interval (1999–2001), we identified 574 hyperglycemic visits. We measured treatment intensification and factors associated with intensification at each visit. RESULTS—Provider-patient dyads intensified oral diabetes treatment in only 128 (22%) of 574 hyperglycemic visits. As expected, worse glycemia was an important predictor of intensification. Treatment was more likely to be intensified for patients with visits that were “routine” (odds ratio [OR] 2.55 [95% CI 1.49–4.38]), for patients taking two or more oral diabetes drugs (2.82 [1.74–4.56]), or for patients with longer intervals between visits (OR per 30 days 1.05 [1.00–1.10]). In contrast, patients with less recent A1C measurements (OR >30 days before the visit 0.53 [0.34–0.85]), patients with a higher number of prior visits (OR per prior visit 0.94 [0.88–1.00]), and African American patients (0.59 [0.35–1.00]) were less likely to have treatment intensified. CONCLUSIONS—Failure to intensify oral diabetes treatment is common in diabetes care. Quality improvement measures in type 2 diabetes should focus on overcoming inertia, improving continuity of care, and reducing racial disparities. American Diabetes Association 2009-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2606824/ /pubmed/18931096 http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/dc08-1297 Text en Copyright © 2009, American Diabetes Association https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ for details.
spellingShingle Clinical Care/Education/Nutrition/Psychosocial Research
Bolen, Shari Danielle
Bricker, Eric
Samuels, T. Alafia
Yeh, Hsin-Chieh
Marinopoulos, Spyridon S.
McGuire, Maura
Abuid, Marcela
Brancati, Frederick L.
Factors Associated With Intensification of Oral Diabetes Medications in Primary Care Provider-Patient Dyads: A Cohort Study
title Factors Associated With Intensification of Oral Diabetes Medications in Primary Care Provider-Patient Dyads: A Cohort Study
title_full Factors Associated With Intensification of Oral Diabetes Medications in Primary Care Provider-Patient Dyads: A Cohort Study
title_fullStr Factors Associated With Intensification of Oral Diabetes Medications in Primary Care Provider-Patient Dyads: A Cohort Study
title_full_unstemmed Factors Associated With Intensification of Oral Diabetes Medications in Primary Care Provider-Patient Dyads: A Cohort Study
title_short Factors Associated With Intensification of Oral Diabetes Medications in Primary Care Provider-Patient Dyads: A Cohort Study
title_sort factors associated with intensification of oral diabetes medications in primary care provider-patient dyads: a cohort study
topic Clinical Care/Education/Nutrition/Psychosocial Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2606824/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18931096
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/dc08-1297
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