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Controlled Trial of a Multifaceted Intervention for Improving Quality of Care for Rural Patients With Type 2 Diabetes.

Authors :
Majumdar, Sumit R.
Guirguis, Lisa M.
Toth, Ellen L.
Lewanczuk, Richard Z.
Lee, T. K.
Johnson, Jeffrey A.
Source :
Diabetes Care. Nov2003, Vol. 26 Issue 11, p3061-3066. 6p. 2 Charts, 1 Graph.
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

OBJECTIVE — Despite good evidence and clinical practice guidelines, studies document that treatment of type 2 diabetes is less than optimal. Lack of resources or limited access may put patients in rural communities at particular risk for suboptimal care. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS — We conducted a prospective, before/after study with concurrent controls to assess the effectiveness of a multidisciplinary diabetes outreach service (intervention) for improving the quality of care for rural patients with type 2 diabetes. Our intervention consisted of six monthly visits by a traveling team of specialist physicians, nurses, dieticians, and a pharmacist. The core of this service was specialist-to-rural primary care physician academic group detailing. Two comparable regions in Northern Alberta were randomly allocated to control or intervention. Data were collected before and 6 months after intervention in a representative volunteer sample. The primary outcome was a 10% improvement in any one of the following: blood pressure, total cholesterol, or HbA[sub 1c]. RESULTS — Our analysis included 200 intervention and 179 control subjects; 14 subjects were at all three primary outcome targets at baseline. The intervention was associated with a trend toward improvement in primary outcome at 6 months (44% intervention vs. 37% control; odds ratio 1.32, 95% CI 0.87-1.99). The intervention was associated with a significant improvement in blood pressure (42% intervention vs. 25% control, P = 0.004); however, there were only small, nonsignificant changes in cholesterol or HbA[sub 1c]. The intervention was associated with a significant increase in satisfaction with diabetes care. Multivariate adjustment for baseline differences between intervention and control subjects did not affect any of the main results. CONCLUSIONS — A diabetes outreach service has the potential to improve the quality of diabetes care for rural patients. Future studies need to involve longer timelines and larger sample sizes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01495992
Volume :
26
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Diabetes Care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
11278438
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.26.11.3061