Abstract

The management of diabetes, like many other chronic conditions, depends on effective primary care engagement. Patients with diabetes without a usual source of care have a higher risk of uncontrolled disease, hospitalizations, and early death. Our objective was to study the effect of a brief intervention to help patients in medically underserved areas obtain rapid primary care follow-up appointments following hospitalization. We performed a pilot pragmatic randomized controlled trial of adult patients with uncontrolled diabetes who had been admitted to one of three hospitals in the Memphis, TN, area. The enhanced usual care arm received a list of primary care clinics, whereas the intervention group had an appointment made for them preceding their index discharge. Patients in both groups were evaluated for primary care appointment attendance within seven and fourteen days of index discharge. In addition, we examined barriers patients encounter to receiving rapid primary care follow-up using a secret shopper approach to assess wait times when calling primary care offices. Twelve patients were enrolled with six in each trial arm. Baseline demographics, access to medical care, and health literacy were similar across the groups. Primary care follow-up was also similar across the groups; no improvements in follow-up rates were seen in the group receiving assistance with making appointments. Identified barriers to making primary care follow-up appointments included inability to schedule an urgent appointment, long hold times when calling doctor’s offices and lack of transportation. Additionally, hold times when calling primary care offices were found to be excessively long in the medically underserved areas studied. The study demonstrates the feasibility of providing patient assistance with scheduling rapid primary care follow-up appointments at the time of discharge and the potential to improve care transitions and access to primary care among patients living in medically underserved areas. Larger pragmatic trials are needed to further test alternative approaches for insuring rapid primary care follow-up in vulnerable patients with ambulatory care-sensitive chronic conditions.

Highlights

  • Improving health system performance requires improving patient outcomes, reducing avoidable hospitalizations, and decreasing unnecessary spending

  • More than half of the patients screened positive for low health literacy (58%) and only 25% of them had a primary care provider

  • The importance of the current results is limited by the study's small size; the higher average number of chronic conditions seen in the enhanced usual care arm could have resulted in enhanced usual care patients having higher than expected primary care follow-up appointment attendance

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Improving health system performance requires improving patient outcomes, reducing avoidable hospitalizations, and decreasing unnecessary spending. Populations with a high disease burden and insufficient access to primary care are at especially high risk of serious medical complications and unnecessary hospitalizations. People with diabetes commonly experience associated comorbidities and complications resulting in high economic and human costs [1, 2]. Access to primary care can reduce emergency department (ED) visits, hospitalizations, and complications for diabetes and other common ambulatory care-sensitive chronic conditions [3, 4]. Previous research demonstrates that engagement in primary care can reduce both prevalence of uncontrolled diabetes and resulting hospitalizations [5]. Diabetes-related hospital admissions are often used to indicate the quality of primary care available to patients [3, 6]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call