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Rewarding for you and us Defeat Diabetes Foundation Defeat Diabetes
Foundation 150 153rd Ave, Suite 300 Madeira Beach, FL 33708 |
Diabetes Patients Lead Peers to Healthier StatusPosted: Saturday, July 02, 2011Training people with diabetes to teach other patients improves utilization of medications and results in lifestyle changes. Dr. Tobin said, "The most important resource in my practice is not my colleagues or other physicians, it is the patients we have in our center." "We have patients who have had diabetes 50 years and that experience has been able to make them successful in controlling their disease, and this gives them the opportunity to go back out into the community and be successful in helping other people," he said. The use of the unpaid, volunteer group leaders had measurable success among the 186 patients who agreed to be part of the study. Overall, more than 400 people -- the large majority of whom had type 2 diabetes -- took part in the activities of the 45 groups of patients that attended meetings at 34 sites, said co-investigator Eric Armbrecht, PhD, assistant professor of medicine at St. Louis University. After two years, in addition to improvement in HbA1c, the researchers reported: Average systolic blood pressure fell three points, from 141 mm Hg to 138 mm Hg (P=0.026). Armbrecht said the volunteers go through a specific training program that is done in partnership with the Washington University Diabetes Center at Barnes Jewish Hospital. "Volunteers have about a 25- to 30-hour course of training to prepare them to lead a group of peers that meets in a community setting," he explained. In the St. Louis program, the doctors selected patients they thought would be good group leaders. "The sessions have different topics to focus the conversation, but in each session, one of the common discussion points is an assessment of goal-setting, progress, and a lot of group support." Martin Abrahamson, MD, associate professor of medicine at the Joslin Clinic/Harvard Medical School, Boston, said, "We think that these programs should go out into the community. We are looking into doing similar programs among our patients." David Kendall, MD, chief scientific and medical officer at the American Diabetes Association stated that, "These patients reduced their HbA1c, their body mass index didn't go up, their blood pressure went down, they ate better, they did more monitoring." "I think this is additional encouraging evidence that integrating diabetes care support into the community setting at low cost with limited resources has additional beneficial effects. Given the size of the diabetic epidemic, additional delivery approaches are going to be essential." Practice Pearls: Source: http://www.diabetesincontrol.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=11131&catid=53&Itemid=8, Presented at the ADA 71st Scientific Sessions, 2011. |
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