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Feasibility of Electronic Health Record Assessment of 6 Pediatric Type 1 Diabetes Self-management Habits and Their Association With Glycemic Outcomes

IMPORTANCE: A low-burden electronic health record (EHR) workflow has been devised to systematize the collection and validation of 6 key diabetes self-management habits: (1) checks glucose at least 4 times/day or uses continuous glucose monitor (CGM); (2) gives at least 3 rapid-acting insulin boluses...

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Autores principales: Lee, Joyce M., Rusnak, Andrea, Garrity, Ashley, Hirschfeld, Emily, Thomas, Inas H., Wichorek, Michelle, Lee, Jung Eun, Rioles, Nicole A., Ebekozien, Osagie, Corathers, Sarah D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Medical Association 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8554640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34709387
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.31278
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author Lee, Joyce M.
Rusnak, Andrea
Garrity, Ashley
Hirschfeld, Emily
Thomas, Inas H.
Wichorek, Michelle
Lee, Jung Eun
Rioles, Nicole A.
Ebekozien, Osagie
Corathers, Sarah D.
author_facet Lee, Joyce M.
Rusnak, Andrea
Garrity, Ashley
Hirschfeld, Emily
Thomas, Inas H.
Wichorek, Michelle
Lee, Jung Eun
Rioles, Nicole A.
Ebekozien, Osagie
Corathers, Sarah D.
author_sort Lee, Joyce M.
collection PubMed
description IMPORTANCE: A low-burden electronic health record (EHR) workflow has been devised to systematize the collection and validation of 6 key diabetes self-management habits: (1) checks glucose at least 4 times/day or uses continuous glucose monitor (CGM); (2) gives at least 3 rapid-acting insulin boluses per day; (3) uses insulin pump; (4) delivers boluses before meals; (5) reviewed glucose data since last clinic visit, and (6) has changed insulin doses since the last clinic visit. OBJECTIVE: To describe the performance of these habits and examine their association with hemoglobin A(1c) (HbA(1c)) levels and time in range (TIR). DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study included individuals with known type 1 diabetes who were seen in a US pediatric diabetes clinic in 2019. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Habit performance, total habit score (sum of 6 habits per person), HbA(1c) levels, and TIR. RESULTS: Of 1344 patients, 1212 (609 [50.2%] males; 66 [5.4%] non-Hispanic Black; 1030 [85.0%] non-Hispanic White; mean [SD] age, 15.5 [4.5] years) were included, of whom 654 (54.0%) were using CGM and had a TIR. Only 105 patients (8.7%) performed all 6 habits. Habit performance was lower among older vs younger patients (age ≥18 years vs ≤12 years: 17 of 411 [4.1%] vs 57 of 330 [17.3%]; P < .001), Black vs White patients (3 [4.5%] vs 95 [9.2%]; P < .001), those with public vs private insurance (14 of 271 [5.2%] vs 91 of 941 [9.7%]; P < .001), and those with lower vs higher parental education levels (<college degree vs ≥college degree: 35 of 443 [7.9%] vs 66 of 574 [11.5%]; P < .001). After adjustment for demographic characteristics and disease duration, for every 1-unit increase in total habit score, we found a mean (SE) 0.6% (0.05) decrease in HbA(1c) among all participants and a mean (SE) 2.86% (0.71) increase in TIR among those who used CGMs. Multiple regression models revealed that performing each habit was associated with a significantly lower HbA(1c) level (habit 1: –0.16% [95% CI, –1.91% to –1.37%]; habit 2: –1.01% [–1.34% to –0.69%]; habit 3: –0.71% [95% CI, –0.93% to –0.49%]; habit 4: –0.97% [95% CI, –1.21% to –0.73%]; habit 5: –0.44% [95% CI, –0.71% to –0.17%]; habit 6: –0.75% [95% CI, –0.96% to –0.53%]; all P < .001). There were differences in HbA(1c) according to race, insurance, and parental education, but these associations were attenuated with the inclusion of the 6 habits, which had more robust associations with HbA(1c) levels than the demographic characteristics. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: These findings suggest that a focus on increasing adherence to the 6 habits could be critical for improving disparities in glycemic outcomes; these metrics have been adopted by the Type 1 Diabetes Exchange Quality Improvement Collaborative for continuous quality improvement.
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spelling pubmed-85546402021-11-10 Feasibility of Electronic Health Record Assessment of 6 Pediatric Type 1 Diabetes Self-management Habits and Their Association With Glycemic Outcomes Lee, Joyce M. Rusnak, Andrea Garrity, Ashley Hirschfeld, Emily Thomas, Inas H. Wichorek, Michelle Lee, Jung Eun Rioles, Nicole A. Ebekozien, Osagie Corathers, Sarah D. JAMA Netw Open Original Investigation IMPORTANCE: A low-burden electronic health record (EHR) workflow has been devised to systematize the collection and validation of 6 key diabetes self-management habits: (1) checks glucose at least 4 times/day or uses continuous glucose monitor (CGM); (2) gives at least 3 rapid-acting insulin boluses per day; (3) uses insulin pump; (4) delivers boluses before meals; (5) reviewed glucose data since last clinic visit, and (6) has changed insulin doses since the last clinic visit. OBJECTIVE: To describe the performance of these habits and examine their association with hemoglobin A(1c) (HbA(1c)) levels and time in range (TIR). DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study included individuals with known type 1 diabetes who were seen in a US pediatric diabetes clinic in 2019. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Habit performance, total habit score (sum of 6 habits per person), HbA(1c) levels, and TIR. RESULTS: Of 1344 patients, 1212 (609 [50.2%] males; 66 [5.4%] non-Hispanic Black; 1030 [85.0%] non-Hispanic White; mean [SD] age, 15.5 [4.5] years) were included, of whom 654 (54.0%) were using CGM and had a TIR. Only 105 patients (8.7%) performed all 6 habits. Habit performance was lower among older vs younger patients (age ≥18 years vs ≤12 years: 17 of 411 [4.1%] vs 57 of 330 [17.3%]; P < .001), Black vs White patients (3 [4.5%] vs 95 [9.2%]; P < .001), those with public vs private insurance (14 of 271 [5.2%] vs 91 of 941 [9.7%]; P < .001), and those with lower vs higher parental education levels (<college degree vs ≥college degree: 35 of 443 [7.9%] vs 66 of 574 [11.5%]; P < .001). After adjustment for demographic characteristics and disease duration, for every 1-unit increase in total habit score, we found a mean (SE) 0.6% (0.05) decrease in HbA(1c) among all participants and a mean (SE) 2.86% (0.71) increase in TIR among those who used CGMs. Multiple regression models revealed that performing each habit was associated with a significantly lower HbA(1c) level (habit 1: –0.16% [95% CI, –1.91% to –1.37%]; habit 2: –1.01% [–1.34% to –0.69%]; habit 3: –0.71% [95% CI, –0.93% to –0.49%]; habit 4: –0.97% [95% CI, –1.21% to –0.73%]; habit 5: –0.44% [95% CI, –0.71% to –0.17%]; habit 6: –0.75% [95% CI, –0.96% to –0.53%]; all P < .001). There were differences in HbA(1c) according to race, insurance, and parental education, but these associations were attenuated with the inclusion of the 6 habits, which had more robust associations with HbA(1c) levels than the demographic characteristics. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: These findings suggest that a focus on increasing adherence to the 6 habits could be critical for improving disparities in glycemic outcomes; these metrics have been adopted by the Type 1 Diabetes Exchange Quality Improvement Collaborative for continuous quality improvement. American Medical Association 2021-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC8554640/ /pubmed/34709387 http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.31278 Text en Copyright 2021 Lee JM et al. JAMA Network Open. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License.
spellingShingle Original Investigation
Lee, Joyce M.
Rusnak, Andrea
Garrity, Ashley
Hirschfeld, Emily
Thomas, Inas H.
Wichorek, Michelle
Lee, Jung Eun
Rioles, Nicole A.
Ebekozien, Osagie
Corathers, Sarah D.
Feasibility of Electronic Health Record Assessment of 6 Pediatric Type 1 Diabetes Self-management Habits and Their Association With Glycemic Outcomes
title Feasibility of Electronic Health Record Assessment of 6 Pediatric Type 1 Diabetes Self-management Habits and Their Association With Glycemic Outcomes
title_full Feasibility of Electronic Health Record Assessment of 6 Pediatric Type 1 Diabetes Self-management Habits and Their Association With Glycemic Outcomes
title_fullStr Feasibility of Electronic Health Record Assessment of 6 Pediatric Type 1 Diabetes Self-management Habits and Their Association With Glycemic Outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility of Electronic Health Record Assessment of 6 Pediatric Type 1 Diabetes Self-management Habits and Their Association With Glycemic Outcomes
title_short Feasibility of Electronic Health Record Assessment of 6 Pediatric Type 1 Diabetes Self-management Habits and Their Association With Glycemic Outcomes
title_sort feasibility of electronic health record assessment of 6 pediatric type 1 diabetes self-management habits and their association with glycemic outcomes
topic Original Investigation
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8554640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34709387
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.31278
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