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Specialists vs. Primary
Care Physicians - Intensifying Treatment
posted March 7,
2005
Specialists differ from primary care
physicians when intensified treatment is necessary for patients with poor
control?
The purpose of the study was to determine whether specialists demonstrated less
clinical inertia than primary care physicians. Diabetic patients with inadequate
glycemic control ought to have their management intensified. Failure to do so
can be termed "clinical inertia."
Using administrative data, we studied all non-insulin-requiring diabetic
patients in eastern Ontario aged 65 or older who had A1c results >8% between
September 1999 and August 2000. Drug intensification was measured by comparing
glucose-lowering drug regimens in 4-month blocks before and after the elevated
A1c test and was defined as 1) the addition of a new oral drug, 2) a dose
increase of an existing oral drug, or 3) the initiation of insulin. Propensity
score-based matching was used to control for confounding between groups.
There were 591 patients with specialist care and 1,911 with exclusively primary
care. In the matched cohorts, 45.1% of patients with specialist care versus
37.4% with primary care had drug intensification (P = 0.009). Most of this
difference was attributed to specialists’ more frequent initiation of insulin in
response to elevated A1c.
In the final analysis it was concluded that fewer than one-half of patients with
high A1c levels had intensification of their medications, regardless of
specialty of their physician. Specialists were more aggressive with insulin
initiation than primary care physicians, which may contribute to the lower A1c
levels seen with specialist care. Interventions assisting patients and
physicians to recognize and overcome clinical inertia should improve diabetes
care in the population.
Source: Diabetes In Control.com: Diabetes Care 28:600-606, 2005.
March 2005 News Article Index
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