Presentation
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Entity
Process
Occurrent
Occurrent
2025-05-07T15:05:02
RDF description of How do the best physicians get diabetes patients to glycemic goals [presentation]? - http://repository.healthpartners.com/individual/document-rn34028
Primary Health Care
Physician's Practice Patterns
<p><b>Objective: </b> To examine the glucose control-related practice patterns of primary care physicians (PCP) and ascertain if those who provide better quality diabetes care have lower rates of clinical inertia.<br> <b>Methods: </b> Study subjects included 80 PCPs at a large medial group in Minnesota, who were ranked on quality of diabetes care using a composite diabetes quality of care measure. Data on use of glucose-lowering pharmacotherapy was combined with laboratory data indicating the level of glycated hemoglobin (A1c) at the time of each office visit to examine differences in patterns of glucose-related treatment as a function of the physicians� quality of care. GLM statistical models were used to assess the relationship.<br> <b>Results: </b> Optimal PCPs, defined as the top quartile of PCPs, had lower rates of clinical inertia than their less well performing peers. Optimal PCPs initiated (p=0.08) and titrated (p=0.02) glucose-lowering therapy at lower A1c levels than their peers. Optimal practice PCPs exhibited a feed-forward treatment strategy, while their less well-performing peers exhibited a feedback treatment strategy.<br> <b>Conclusions: </b> There was significant variation in rates of clinical inertia and in trigger levels of A1c at which different PCPs initiated or intensified glucose-lowering therapy in their adult patients with diabetes. Optimal docs had lower rates of clinical inertia. Interventions to reduce clinical inertia have great potential to improve diabetes care.<p>
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How do the best physicians get diabetes patients to glycemic goals [presentation]?
37052
Quality of Health Care
2023-09-30T20:36:00.593-05:00
presentation
HMO Research Network (HMORN) 15th Annual Conference: Clinical Effectiveness: Leadership in Comparative Effectiveness and Translational Research
public
Diabetes
document-rn34028