Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Quality of Care for Diabetic Patients in a Large Urban Public Hospital

2003; American Diabetes Association; Volume: 26; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2337/diacare.26.3.563

ISSN

1935-5548

Autores

Pitiporn Suwattee, J. Christopher Lynch, Merri Pendergrass,

Tópico(s)

Primary Care and Health Outcomes

Resumo

OBJECTIVE—We compared diabetes quality-of-care indicators for patients receiving medical treatment in three practice settings of the same hospital. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—A cross-sectional medical record review for patients receiving care between 1 July 2000 and 30 June 2001 was conducted. Records were abstracted from three practice settings: the Diabetes Clinic (DIABETES), a general medicine clinic staffed by internal medicine residents (RESIDENT), and a general medicine clinic whose providers were medical school faculty physicians (FACULTY). Record review (n = 791) yielded data on diabetes indicators that were derived primarily from the Diabetes Quality Improvement Project. RESULTS—There were significant differences between the DIABETES, RESIDENT, and FACULTY clinics for the percentages of patients with HbA1c testing (94 vs. 92 vs. 76%, P < 0.001), HbA1c >9.5% (31 vs. 36 vs. 43%, P < 0.05), nephropathy assessment (79 vs. 67 vs. 58%, P < 0.001), lipid assessment (86 vs. 79 vs. 76%, P < 0.050), LDL <130 mg/dl (54 vs. 44 vs. 43%, P < 0.05), blood pressure <140/90 mmHg (63 vs. 55 vs. 49%, P < 0.025), eye examinations (64 vs. 50 vs. 31%, P < 0.001), foot examinations (97 vs. 55 vs. 24%, P < 0.001), ACE inhibitor treatment (66 vs. 69 vs. 35%, P < 0.001), and aspirin treatment (71 vs. 59 vs. 15%, P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS—There is considerable variation in diabetes management in different primary care settings of the same hospital. Although management in all settings was suboptimal, the results attained by the patients in the Diabetes Clinic represent minimal achievable goals for all diabetic patients in this hospital.

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