Abstract

In the United States, many individuals with diabetes mellitus (DM) do not achieve treatment goals despite the availability of effective interventions. Provider clinical inertia is one cause of these unfavorable outcomes. Targeted automatic eConsults (TACos) are an emerging technology-based intervention with potential to address clinical inertia in primary care (PC). TACos prospectively identify at-risk patients and use unsolicited specialist recommendations to prompt treatment intensification. Through a payer-provider collaboration, a TACos intervention was piloted for adults with uncontrolled DM (HbA1c >8%) to understand impact on DM clinical inertia and outcomes. Clinical inertia was assessed by measuring whether a PC provider implemented recommended therapeutic changes. Six-month changes in HbA1c and health care costs per member per month were evaluated using an observational matched design and intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis. The analysis included 196 individuals who received a TACos between February 2021 and August 2021 (ITT group) matched to 392 controls based on clinical and demographic criteria. TACos recommendations were implemented 65% of the time. Median percent change in HbA1c was significantly greater for the ITT group versus controls (-10.9% vs. -10.2%; P = 0.0359). Median total costs were 7.9% lower in the ITT group (P = 0.0900). A per protocol analysis was done to examine effects between ITT group individuals with an implemented TACos recommendation (n = 126) and controls. Median percent change in HbA1c was significantly greater (-19.5% vs. -10.2%; P < 0.0001), but there was no difference in total costs (-7.9%; P = 0.1753). TACos may feasibly address clinical inertia in PC and improve HbA1c for uncontrolled DM.

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