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The Diabetes Care Support Service for General Practitioners in Auckland

Overview
Journal N Z Med J
Specialty General Medicine
Date 1997 Feb 28
PMID 9076284
Citations 12
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Aims: Diabetic complications can often be prevented by timely detection and intervention. Optimising diabetes care requires effective monitoring of risk factors at both practice and district level. We describe a novel method which combines district monitoring of diabetes with enhanced diabetes care by individual general practitioners.

Methods: All general practitioners in south and west Auckland (n = 291) were invited to join the Diabetes Care Support Service (DCSS). This involved the identification of all diabetic patients within the practice and the completion of an audit from with key measures of diabetes and its care.

Results: Audit was completed for 217 (75%) of general practitioners and 4611 diabetic patients: 39% of general practitioners completed their own audit. The proportion of completed patient assessments ranged between 35% (foot pulses) and 89% (blood pressure). The process was found to be helpful by 88% of general practitioners (who commented).

Conclusion: The DCSS is a seamless, service-orientated approach to the delivery of diabetes care by primary and secondary services and is likely to improve care district-wide and identify the need for further interventions. Subsequent audit passes will allow the demonstration and monitoring of any changes that occur, as well as the demonstration of its feasibility and acceptability on an ongoing basis.

Citing Articles

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All-cause, premature, and cardiovascular death attributable to socioeconomic and ethnic disparities among New Zealanders with type 1 diabetes 1994-2019: a multi-linked population-based cohort study.

Yu D, Cai Y, Osuagwu U, Pickering K, Baker J, Cutfield R BMC Public Health. 2024; 24(1):298.

PMID: 38273238 PMC: 10811898. DOI: 10.1186/s12889-023-17326-8.