Abstract
A Federally Qualified Health Center received ongoing external support for half-time salaries for two nurse practitioners to treat people with poorly controlled diabetes (A1C .9.0%) in the clinic’s diabetes program using approved detailed treatment protocols. Patients were treated for 1 year and graduated from this program if their A1C fell to,7.5%. Ninety-one percent graduated, and treatment was deemed to have failed in 9% who did not achieve an A1C,7.5% by the end of the year of treatment. The suggestion is made to assign a specially trained diabetes nurse or physician assistant to serve many primary care providers at important clinical junctures to improve diabetes outcomes throughout busy primary care practices.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Davidson, M. B. (2021). Effect of Diabetes-Trained Nurse Practitioners on Glycemic Outcomes: Their Suggested Use in Busy Primary Care Practices. Clinical Diabetes, 39(3), 293–296. https://doi.org/10.2337/cd20-0102
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