The Impact of Primary Care Practitioner Intervention as an adjunct to a Diabetes Case Management System

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Abstract

Objective: The objective of this study was to assess whether additional primary care practitioner (PCP) contacts beyond the intake visit are associated with reduced hemoglobin a1c in patients with type 2 diabetes actively engaged in the Kaiser Permanente case management system. methOds: This retrospective cohort study using the Kaiser Permanente electronic health record explored the effect of enhanced PCP contact among adult patients with type 2 diabetes actively working with diabetes case managers (defined as ≥ 4 case manager contacts during the study period). results: a total of 837 patients met the inclusion and exclusion criteria. on average, patients with the highest PCP contact, < 7 contacts, had ac levels 0.53 lower than those in the lowest PCP contact quartile, < 3 contacts (p = 0.0007). a1c decreased an average of 0.20 when the PCP contact quartile was one quartile higher (p = 0.0004). holding the baseline a1c constant, the a1c decreased an average of 0.15 when the PCP contact quartile was one quartile higher (p = 0.0024). a1c change was significantly correlated with baseline a1c; a1c decreased by 0.64 more as the baseline a1c level increased by 1 (p < 0.0001). additionally, the a1c level decreased by 0.02 more when patient age increased by 1 (p < 0.0001). Metformin use was associated with a decrease of a1c by 0.40 (p = 0.0057), whereas insulin use was associated with an increase of a1c by 0.29 (p = 0.0280). cOnclusiOn: In summary, a significant reduction was observed in a1c in patients with increased PCP contacts. This effect was seen in patients already receiving recommended case manager support.

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APA

Maximous, M., Webster, J., Hsu, J. W. Y., Chung, J., & Chock, B. (2023). The Impact of Primary Care Practitioner Intervention as an adjunct to a Diabetes Case Management System. Permanente Journal, 27(2), 37–42. https://doi.org/10.7812/TPP/22.088

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