Trends in the performance of quality indicators for diabetes care in the community and in diabetes-related health status: An Israeli ecological study

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Abstract

Background: Israel is one of the few countries that have a national program for quality assessment of community healthcare. We aimed to evaluate whether improved performance in diabetes care was associated with improved health of diabetic patients on a national level. Methods: We conducted a nationwide ecological study estimating improvements in diabetes-related quality indicators and health outcomes. We estimated both correlations between composite measures of diabetes-related quality indicators and selected outcomes, and assessed through a joinpoint analysis whether trends in selected outcomes changed 4 years after the inception of the national program. Results: Between 2002 and 2010, the prevalence of diabetes in Israeli adults increased from 4.8% to 7.4%. During these years, an improvement was noticed in most quality indicators (from 53% to 75% for the composite score). Declines were noted in rates of blindness, diabetes-related end-stage kidney disease, lower limbs amputations and diabetes-related mortality. Significant accelerations in decline were noted for amputations in men and diabetes-related mortality in both Arab men and women 4 years after the inception of the national program. Conclusion: This study suggests that Israel's national program for quality indicators in diabetes care in the community has probably had a significant impact on the health status of the whole population and may have contributed to narrowing gaps in life expectancy between Israeli Jews and Arabs. Future studies based on individual-level data are needed to confirm these results.

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Calderon-Margalit, R., Cohen-Dadi, M., Opas, D., Jaffe, D. H., Levine, J., Ben-Yehuda, A., … Manor, O. (2018). Trends in the performance of quality indicators for diabetes care in the community and in diabetes-related health status: An Israeli ecological study. Israel Journal of Health Policy Research, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13584-018-0206-3

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