Chin M H, Cook S, Jin L, Drum M L, Harrison J F, Koppert J, Thiel F, Harrand A G, Schaefer C T, Takashima H T, Chiu S C
Department of Medicine, Diabetes Research and Training Center, University of Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.
Diabetes Care. 2001 Feb;24(2):268-74. doi: 10.2337/diacare.24.2.268.
We aimed to identify barriers to improving care for individuals with diabetes in community health centers. These findings are important because many such patients, as in most other practice settings, receive care that does not meet evidence-based standards.
In 42 Midwestern health centers, we surveyed 389 health providers and administrators about the barriers they faced delivering diabetes care. We report on home blood glucose monitoring, HbA1c tests, dilated eye examinations, foot examinations, diet, and exercise, all of which are a subset of the larger clinical practice recommendations of the American Diabetes Association (ADA).
Among the 279 (72%) respondents, providers perceived that patients were significantly less likely than providers to believe that key processes of care were important (overall mean on 30-point scale: providers 26.8, patients 18.2, P = 0.0001). Providers were more confident in their ability to instruct patients on diet and exercise than on their ability to help them make changes in these areas. Ratings of the importance of access to care and finances as barriers varied widely; however, >25% of the providers and administrators agreed that significant barriers included affordability of home blood glucose monitoring, HbA1c testing, dilated eye examination, and special diets; nonproximity of ophthalmologist; forgetting to order eye examinations and to examine patients' feet; time required to teach home blood glucose monitoring; and language or cultural barriers.
Providers in health centers indicate a need to enhance behavioral change in diabetic patients. In addition, better health care delivery systems and reforms that improve the affordability, accessibility, and efficiency of care are also likely to help health centers meet ADA standards of care.
我们旨在确定社区卫生中心在改善糖尿病患者护理方面存在的障碍。这些发现很重要,因为许多此类患者,与大多数其他医疗机构中的患者一样,接受的护理未达到循证标准。
在中西部的42家卫生中心,我们对389名医疗服务提供者和管理人员进行了调查,询问他们在提供糖尿病护理时面临的障碍。我们报告了家庭血糖监测、糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)检测、散瞳眼科检查、足部检查、饮食和运动情况,所有这些都是美国糖尿病协会(ADA)更大范围临床实践建议的一部分。
在279名(72%)受访者中,医疗服务提供者认为患者比他们自己更不相信关键护理流程很重要(30分制总体平均分:医疗服务提供者26.8分,患者18.2分,P = 0.0001)。医疗服务提供者对指导患者饮食和运动的能力比对帮助患者在这些方面做出改变的能力更有信心。将获得护理和资金方面的障碍视为重要因素的评分差异很大;然而,超过25%的医疗服务提供者和管理人员一致认为,重大障碍包括家庭血糖监测、HbA1c检测、散瞳眼科检查和特殊饮食的可负担性;眼科医生距离远;忘记安排眼科检查和检查患者足部;教授家庭血糖监测所需时间;以及语言或文化障碍。
卫生中心的医疗服务提供者表示需要加强糖尿病患者的行为改变。此外,更好的医疗服务提供系统以及改善护理可负担性、可及性和效率的改革也可能有助于卫生中心达到ADA护理标准。