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Diabetic and Obese Patient Clinical Outcomes Improve During a Care Management Implementation in Primary Care.

Citation
Holtrop, J. S., et al. “Diabetic And Obese Patient Clinical Outcomes Improve During A Care Management Implementation In Primary Care.”. Journal Of Primary Care & Community Health, pp. 312-318.
Center University of Michigan
Author Jodi Summers Holtrop, Zhehui Luo, Gretchen Piatt, Lee A Green, Qiaoling Chen, John Piette
Keywords care management, chronic disease, diabetes, obesity, Primary care
Abstract

BACKGROUND: To address the increasing burden of chronic disease, many primary care practices are turning to care management and the hiring of care managers to help patients coordinate their care and self-manage their conditions. Care management is often, but not always, proving effective at improving patient outcomes, but more evidence is needed.

METHODS: In this pair-matched cluster randomized trial, 5 practices implemented care management and were compared with 5 comparison practices within the same practice organization. Targeted patients included diabetic patients with a hemoglobin A1c >9% and nondiabetic obese patients. Clinical values tracked were A1c, blood pressure, low-density lipoprotein, microalbumin, and weight.

RESULTS: Clinically important improvements were demonstrated in the intervention versus comparison practices, with diabetic patients improving A1c control and obese patients experiencing weight loss. There was a 12% relative increase in the proportion of patients meeting the clinical target of A1c <7% (95% CI, 3%-20%), and 26% of obese nondiabetic patients in chronic care management practices lost 5% or more of their body weight as compared with 10% of comparison patients (adjusted relative improvement, 15%; CI, 2%-28%).

CONCLUSIONS: These findings add to the growing evidence-base for the effectiveness of care management as an effective clinical practice with regard to improving diabetes- and obesity-related outcomes.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Journal of primary care & community health
Volume
8
Issue
4
Number of Pages
312-318
Date Published
10/2017
ISSN Number
2150-1327
DOI
10.1177/2150131917715536
Alternate Journal
J Prim Care Community Health
PMID
28645227
PMCID
PMC5932733
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