Start improving the quality of care for people with type 2 diabetes through a general practice support program: a cluster randomized trial.

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Publication year
2010Source
Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice, 88, 1, (2010), pp. 56-64ISSN
Annotation
01 april 2010
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
IQ Healthcare
Journal title
Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice
Volume
vol. 88
Issue
iss. 1
Page start
p. 56
Page end
p. 64
Subject
NCEBP 3: Implementation ScienceAbstract
AIMS: To evaluate the effectiveness of a two-arm quality improvement program (QIP) to support general practice with limited tradition in chronic care on type 2 diabetes patient outcomes. METHODS: During 18 months, we performed a cluster randomized trial with randomization of General Practices. The usual QIP (UQIP: 53 GPs, 918 patients) merged standard interventions including evidence-based treatment protocol, annual benchmarking, postgraduate education, case-coaching for GPs and patient education. The advanced QIP (AQIP: 67 GPs, 1577 patients) introduced additional interventions focussing on intensified follow-up, shared care and patient behavioural changes. Main outcomes were HbA1c, systolic blood pressure (SBP), and low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), analyzed by generalized estimating equations and linear mixed models. RESULTS: In UQIP, endpoints improved significantly after intervention: HbA1c -0.4%, 95% CI [-0.4; -0. 3]; SBP -3mmHg, 95% CI [-4; -1]; LDL-C -13mg/dl, 95% CI [-15; -11]. In AQIP, there were no significant additional improvements in outcomes: HbA1c -0.4%, 95% CI [-0.4; -0.3]; SBP -4mmHg, 95% CI [-5; -2]; LDL-C -14mg/dl, 95% CI [-15; -11]. CONCLUSIONS: A multifaceted program merging standard interventions in support of general practice induced significant improvements in the quality of diabetes care. Intensified follow-up in AQIP with focus on shared care and patient behaviour changes did not yield additional benefit.
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- Academic publications [227671]
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- Faculty of Medical Sciences [87083]
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