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Primary care patient and provider preferences for diabetes care managers

PURPOSE: The collaborative care model, using care managers, has been shown to be effective in achieving sustained treatment outcomes in chronic disease management. Little effort has been made to find out patient preferences for chronic disease care, hence, we conducted a study aimed at identifying t...

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Autores principales: DeJesus, Ramona S, Vickers, Kristin S, Stroebel, Robert J, Cha, Stephen S
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2898118/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20622917
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author DeJesus, Ramona S
Vickers, Kristin S
Stroebel, Robert J
Cha, Stephen S
author_facet DeJesus, Ramona S
Vickers, Kristin S
Stroebel, Robert J
Cha, Stephen S
author_sort DeJesus, Ramona S
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: The collaborative care model, using care managers, has been shown to be effective in achieving sustained treatment outcomes in chronic disease management. Little effort has been made to find out patient preferences for chronic disease care, hence, we conducted a study aimed at identifying these. METHODS: A 20-item questionnaire, asking for patients’ and providers’ preferences and perceptions, was mailed out to 1000 randomly selected patients in Olmsted County, Minnesota, identified through a diabetes registry to have type 2 diabetes mellitus, a prototypical prevalent chronic disease. Surveys were also sent to 42 primary care providers. RESULTS: There were 254 (25.4%) patient responders and 28 (66%) provider responders. The majority of patients (>70%) and providers (89%) expressed willingness to have various aspects of diabetes care managed by a care manager. Although 75% of providers would be comfortable expanding the care manager role to other chronic diseases, only 39.5% of patient responders would be willing to see a care manager for other chronic problems. Longer length of time from initial diagnosis of diabetes was associated with decreased patient likelihood to work with a care manager. CONCLUSION: Despite study limitations, such as the lack of validated measures to assess perceptions related to care management, our results suggest that patients and providers are willing to collaborate with a care manager and that both groups have similar role expectations of a care manager.
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spelling pubmed-28981182010-07-09 Primary care patient and provider preferences for diabetes care managers DeJesus, Ramona S Vickers, Kristin S Stroebel, Robert J Cha, Stephen S Patient Prefer Adherence Original Research PURPOSE: The collaborative care model, using care managers, has been shown to be effective in achieving sustained treatment outcomes in chronic disease management. Little effort has been made to find out patient preferences for chronic disease care, hence, we conducted a study aimed at identifying these. METHODS: A 20-item questionnaire, asking for patients’ and providers’ preferences and perceptions, was mailed out to 1000 randomly selected patients in Olmsted County, Minnesota, identified through a diabetes registry to have type 2 diabetes mellitus, a prototypical prevalent chronic disease. Surveys were also sent to 42 primary care providers. RESULTS: There were 254 (25.4%) patient responders and 28 (66%) provider responders. The majority of patients (>70%) and providers (89%) expressed willingness to have various aspects of diabetes care managed by a care manager. Although 75% of providers would be comfortable expanding the care manager role to other chronic diseases, only 39.5% of patient responders would be willing to see a care manager for other chronic problems. Longer length of time from initial diagnosis of diabetes was associated with decreased patient likelihood to work with a care manager. CONCLUSION: Despite study limitations, such as the lack of validated measures to assess perceptions related to care management, our results suggest that patients and providers are willing to collaborate with a care manager and that both groups have similar role expectations of a care manager. Dove Medical Press 2010-06-24 /pmc/articles/PMC2898118/ /pubmed/20622917 Text en © 2010 DeJesus et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
DeJesus, Ramona S
Vickers, Kristin S
Stroebel, Robert J
Cha, Stephen S
Primary care patient and provider preferences for diabetes care managers
title Primary care patient and provider preferences for diabetes care managers
title_full Primary care patient and provider preferences for diabetes care managers
title_fullStr Primary care patient and provider preferences for diabetes care managers
title_full_unstemmed Primary care patient and provider preferences for diabetes care managers
title_short Primary care patient and provider preferences for diabetes care managers
title_sort primary care patient and provider preferences for diabetes care managers
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2898118/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20622917
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