Early identification and treatment of complications of diabetes mellitus may reduce the severity of the complications. As part of a program to reduce these complications in the Denver Department of Health and Hospitals patient population, our study determined how frequently preventive care, e.g., fundoscopic examinations, referral to an ophthalmologist, foot examinations, and assessment of cardiovascular risk factors, was provided to diabetic patients. With the use of billing records to identify a large sample of diabetic patients, a chart review of 544 patients was conducted. During the study year, the mean ± SE number of visits to primary-care clinics was 5.7 ± 0.22, with 86.4% having at least one visit. Most diabetic patients were seen by primary-care physicians; only 9% received care in a specialized diabetes clinic. Despite frequent primarycare visits, most diabetic patients in this county healthcare system did not have documentation of care to detect complications of diabetes mellitus, and referral services for detection and treatment of these complications were infrequently used. Moreover, among patients seen on >10 occasions in a primary-care setting, preventive care was not provided to 30% of the patients. Preventive care does not appear to be a regular part of a primary-care visit for most of the diabetic patients in this study.
[1]
E. Rayfield,et al.
Patterns of foot examination in a diabetes clinic.
,
1985,
The American journal of medicine.
[2]
G. Barnett,et al.
A Computer-Based Monitoring System for Follow-Up of Elevated Blood Pressure
,
1983,
Medical care.
[3]
Closing the Gap: The Problem of Diabetes Mellitus in the United States
,
1985,
Diabetes Care.
[4]
L. Deeb,et al.
Interventions Among Primary-Care Practitioners to Improve Care for Preventable Complications of Diabetes
,
1988,
Diabetes Care.