Peterson K A
Minnesota Academy of Family Physicians Research Network, Minneapolis.
J Fam Pract. 1994 Apr;38(4):361-7.
The purpose of this study was to identify the characteristics of diabetes care delivered by primary care physicians.
Twenty-seven primary care physicians recruited through the Minnesota Academy of Family Physicians Research Network and the Wisconsin Research Network recorded a sample of 240 visits for care of patients with diabetes mellitus. Information was collected concerning physician and patient demographics, practice characteristics, and patterns of delivery of diabetes care including referral and clinical outcomes.
Seventeen percent of the patients in this study had type I diabetes mellitus; 81% had type II. Fourteen percent of the patients with type I diabetes and 20% of patients with type II were within their target glucose range. Average hemoglobin-A1c was 10.0% +/- 3.4% and 8.9% +/- 2.3% for patients with type I and type II diabetes, respectively (normal, 4.0% to 6.1%). Two distinct patterns of referral existed for patients with newly diagnosed type I diabetes: 44% of physicians rarely referred these patients, whereas 20% almost always referred. Although distance to specialists increased as community size decreased, frequency of referral was not related to practice location. Ninety-five percent of physicians in this study were directly involved in the diabetes education of their patients, and 56% had no certified diabetes educator available.
Over the course of this study, patients frequently persisted with treatment regimens that failed to stabilize blood glucose values. With recent evidence that improved glucose control may delay or prevent diabetes complications, it is increasingly important for the primary care physician to optimize available resources to improve glucose control in patients with diabetes in an effort to improve long-term clinical outcomes.
本研究的目的是确定初级保健医生提供糖尿病护理的特点。
通过明尼苏达家庭医生学会研究网络和威斯康星研究网络招募的27名初级保健医生记录了240例糖尿病患者就诊的样本。收集了有关医生和患者人口统计学、执业特点以及糖尿病护理提供模式(包括转诊和临床结果)的信息。
本研究中17%的患者患有I型糖尿病;81%患有II型糖尿病。I型糖尿病患者中有14%、II型糖尿病患者中有20%的血糖处于目标范围内。I型和II型糖尿病患者的平均糖化血红蛋白分别为10.0%±3.4%和8.9%±2.3%(正常范围为4.0%至6.1%)。新诊断的I型糖尿病患者存在两种不同的转诊模式:44%的医生很少转诊这些患者,而20%的医生几乎总是转诊。尽管随着社区规模减小到专科医生的距离增加,但转诊频率与执业地点无关。本研究中95%的医生直接参与患者的糖尿病教育,56%没有获得认证的糖尿病教育者。
在本研究过程中,患者经常坚持使用无法稳定血糖值的治疗方案。鉴于最近有证据表明改善血糖控制可能延迟或预防糖尿病并发症,初级保健医生优化可用资源以改善糖尿病患者的血糖控制从而改善长期临床结果变得越来越重要。