Dec. 3 - Quality-Improvement Initiatives Lead to Progress in
Diabetes Care
Two major initiatives designed to improve primary
care treatment of type 2 diabetes have yielded significant benefits
in largely minority, disadvantaged populations, according to
a pair of studies in the December issue of Medical
Care, published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins,
a part of Wolters Kluwer Health, a leading provider of information
and business intelligence for students, professionals, and institutions
in medicine, nursing, allied health, pharmacy and the pharmaceutical
industry.
One study finds that patients treated at clinics
that follow the "Chronic Care Model" have lower rates
of diabetes-related coronary artery disease, while another finds
that the "Health Disparities Collaboratives" initiative
has improved diabetes care at U.S. community health centers.
In both studies, outcomes appeared better when
care more closely followed the research-based quality improvement
programs. "Patients are better off when we use what we
know; the more reliably we use it, the better off they are,"
writes Dr. Donald M. Berwick of the Institute for Healthcare
Improvement, Cambridge, Mass., in an accompanying editorial.
"That's the simple, affirming conclusion of both of these
papers."
Dr. Michael Parchman and colleagues of the South
Texas Veterans Health Care System, San Antonio, evaluated an
approach called the Chronic Care Model (CCM), which outlines
specific organizational characteristics believed to lead to
improved outcomes for patients with chronic diseases such as
type 2 diabetes. Using data on diabetic patients treated at
twenty Texas primary care clinics, the researchers looked at
how closely diabetes care followed the CCM approach, and whether
CCM care led to reductions in the risk of coronary heart disease—a
major complication of diabetes.
Just fifteen percent of patients in the study
met target levels for three critical risk factors: hemoglobin
A1c (which measures long-term control of blood sugar levels),
blood pressure, and lipid levels (including cholesterol). The
overall coronary risk over 10 years was 16.2%—nearly one-third
of this risk (5.0%) could be explained by poor control of risk
factors.
At clinics that followed the CCM approach more
closely, the percentage of CHD risk explained by poor risk factor
control was significantly reduced. For example, at a clinic
that closely followed the CCM, just 1.7% of CHD risk was explained
by poor risk factor control, compared to 5.0% at a clinic that
only partially followed the CCM approach. "These findings
contribute to the growing body of evidence documenting a relationship
between how care is provided in primary care clinic settings
and patient outcomes," Dr. Parchman and colleagues conclude.
The second study, led by Dr Marshall H. Chin
of University of Chicago, evaluated the impact of a Health Resources
and Services Administration initiative, the Health Disparities
Collaborative (HDC). The goal of the HDC was to institute a
quality improvement program for diabetes care for patients treated
at community health centers.
Using nationwide data, the researchers found
that health centers where staff were trained in the HDC approach
achieved significant improvements in several measures of diabetes
care, including reductions in hemoglobin A1c level and "bad"
cholesterol levels. Centers receiving a more intensive form
of the HDC approach had only slightly better improvement. It
may be that the "standard" HDC approach is adequate,
or that even stronger interventions will be needed to achieve
greater improvements.
New approaches to improving care for patients
with chronic diseases such as diabetes are urgently needed—particularly
in medically "under-served" populations at increased
risk of poor health outcomes. However, it can be difficult to
translate research-proven management approaches into "real-world"
health care settings.
The new studies show that research-based initiatives
such as CCM and HDC can improve diabetes care for disadvantaged
populations, at both the patient and organizational levels.
Dr. Berwick writes, "Both papers seek to build a bridge
between two important worlds of endeavor: the world of study
and assessment of medical practices, and the world of action
to put that knowledge to work on behalf of patients."
Source: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
(View Daily
news Archive)
|