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Survey of primary care providers' knowledge of screening for, diagnosing and managing prediabetes.

Citation
Tseng, E., et al. “Survey Of Primary Care Providers' Knowledge Of Screening For, Diagnosing And Managing Prediabetes.”. Journal Of General Internal Medicine, pp. 1172-1178.
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Author Eva Tseng, Raquel C Greer, Paul O'Rourke, Hsin-Chieh Yeh, Maura M McGuire, Jeanne M Clark, Nisa M Maruthur
Keywords Prediabetes, Prevention, Primary care
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Prediabetes affects 86 million US adults, but primary care providers' (PCPs') knowledge, practices, attitudes and beliefs toward prediabetes are unclear.

OBJECTIVE: Assess PCPs' (1) knowledge of risk factors that should prompt prediabetes screening, laboratory criteria for diagnosing prediabetes and guidelines for management of prediabetes; (2) management practices around prediabetes; (3) attitudes and beliefs about prediabetes.

DESIGN: Self-administered written survey of PCPs.

PARTICIPANTS: One hundred forty of 155 PCPs (90%) attending an annual provider retreat for academically affiliated multispecialty practices in the mid-Atlantic region.

MAIN MEASURES: Descriptive analyses of survey questions on knowledge, management, and attitudes and beliefs related to prediabetes. Multivariate logistic regression was used to determine the association between provider characteristics (gender, race/ethnicity, years since training, specialty and provider type) and knowledge, management, and attitudes and beliefs about prediabetes.

KEY RESULTS: Six percent of PCPs correctly identified all of the risk factors that should prompt prediabetes screening. Only 17% of PCPs correctly identified the laboratory parameters for diagnosing prediabetes based on both fasting glucose and hemoglobin A1c. Nearly 90% of PCPs reported close follow-up (within 6 months) of patients with prediabetes. Few PCPs (11%) selected referral to a behavioral weight loss program as the recommended initial management approach to prediabetes. PCPs agreed that patient-related factors are important barriers to lifestyle change and metformin use. Provider characteristics were generally not associated with knowledge, management, attitudes and beliefs about prediabetes in multivariate analyses.

CONCLUSIONS: Addressing gaps in knowledge and the underutilization of behavioral weight loss programs in prediabetes are two essential areas where PCPs could take a lead in curbing the diabetes epidemic.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Journal of general internal medicine
Volume
32
Issue
11
Number of Pages
1172-1178
Date Published
11/2017
ISSN Number
1525-1497
DOI
10.1007/s11606-017-4103-1
Alternate Journal
J Gen Intern Med
PMID
28730532
PMCID
PMC5653548
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