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Diabetes management

About: Diabetes management is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 6060 publications have been published within this topic receiving 164670 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Based on this methodology, integrated health care delivery provided by a network of GPs improved health outcomes of type 2 diabetics with acceptable cost effectiveness, which suggests that similar outcomes may be obtained elsewhere.
Abstract: Type 2 diabetes is rapidly growing as a proportion of the disease burden in Australia as elsewhere. This study addresses the cost effectiveness of an integrated approach to assisting general practitioners (GPs) with diabetes management. This approach uses a centralized database of clinical data of an Australian Division of General Practice (a network of GPs) to co-ordinate care according to national guidelines.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An educational module that serves as a tutorial on the best practice for the management of diabetes and hyperglycemia in the noncritically ill hospital patient is provided, and a practical summary of the key concepts that will allow clinicians to confidently employ physiologic insulin regimens when caring for their hospital patients is provided.
Abstract: 5 MedStar Diabetes Institute, Washington, DC. R ecently, there has been a heightened interest in improving the quality and safety of the management of diabetes and hyperglycemia in the hospital. While observational data strongly suggests an association of hyperglycemia with morbidity and mortality in adults on general medicine and surgery units, clinical research has not yet defined the best practices for managing hyperglycemia in the hospital outside the intensive care unit (ICU). As a result, many physicians do not have a well-formulated approach to managing hyperglycemia in the noncritically ill hospital patient, and the use of insulin therapy to attain targeted blood glucose (BG) control is often subject to practice variability, leading to suboptimal glycemic outcomes. Practical ‘‘guidelines’’ for the management of this common clinical problem have been formulated by experts in the field, based on understanding of the physiology of glucose and insulin dynamics, the characteristics of currently available insulin preparations, and clinical experience. In 2004, in Clement et al., the American Diabetes Association published a technical review promoting the use of physiologic (‘‘basal-nutritional-correction dose’’) insulin regimens in the hospital to achieve targeted glycemic outcomes. This approach has been disseminated via review articles, and more recently, a randomized, controlled trial demonstrated that hospitalized type 2 diabetes patients experienced better glycemic control when treated with a physiologic insulin regimen than when treated with sliding-scale insulin alone. The Society of Hospital Medicine has assembled a Glycemic Control Task Force, which is charged with providing physicians and hospitals with practical tools to improve the safety and efficacy of diabetes management in the hospital. One product of this work is an educational module that serves as a tutorial on the best practice for the management of diabetes and hyperglycemia in the noncritically ill hospital patient. This article is based on that module, and provides a practical summary of the key concepts that will allow clinicians to confidently employ physiologic insulin regimens when caring for their hospital patients. Case: Ms. X is a 56-year-old obese woman with type 2 diabetes mellitus who is admitted for treatment of an infected diabetes-related foot ulcer. The patient will be allowed to eat dinner in a couple of hours, but the surgeons have requested that she be kept ‘‘nothing by mouth’’ (NPO) after midnight for surgical debridement in the morning. Her current weight is 100 kg, and her No honoraria were paid to any authors for time and expertise spent on the writing of this article.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study demonstrated that diabetes care visits in school are feasible and not disruptive to the students' educational program and improved diabetes management at home and at school.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: How an integrated health care system implemented a CHW-led diabetes self-management education program targeting Hispanic patients is described and lessons learned from the first 18 months of operation are reported.
Abstract: Disparities in prevalence of type 2 diabetes and complications in underserved populations have been linked to poor quality of care including lack of access to diabetes management programs. Interventions utilizing community health workers (CHWs) to assist with diabetes management have demonstrated improvements in patient outcomes. Use of CHWs may be an effective model for providing care coordination and reducing disparities, but there is limited knowledge on how to implement this model on a large scale. This article describes how an integrated health care system implemented a CHW-led diabetes self-management education program targeting Hispanic patients and reports lessons learned from the first 18 months of operation.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Given that metabolic inflammation has been established as a key pathophysiological event that drives the progression of diabetes, this paper focuses on the protective effects of representative phytochemicals in metabolic inflammation.

43 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023168
2022331
2021480
2020511
2019405
2018386