Abstract

JEVIN (Jena's St. Vincent Trial) is a prospective, 10 year follow-up, population-based survey of all insulin treated patients with type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus aged 16 to 60 years and living in the city of Jena (100,000 inhabitants), Thuringia, Germany. It aims to show the effects of implementation of the St. Vincent Declaration and to evaluate the effect of recent changes in the health care system and new treatment strategies. 190 patients (83% of the target population), 244 patients (90%) and 261 patients (90%) were studied in 1989/90, 1994/95 and 1999/2000, respectively. Up to 1994/95, the HbA1c of patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus increased (1994/95: 8.50+/-1.80% versus 1989/90: 7.83+/-1.60%, p=0.002). For patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus, it remained constant (9.01+/-2.06% versus 9.17+/-1.60%, n. s.). During the period from 1994/95 to 1999/2000, there was a substantial improvement in the relative HbA1c of both, patients with type 1 (7.62+/-1.55%, p<0.0001), and with type 2 diabetes (7.57+/-1.29%, p<0.0001). Up to 1999/2000, 87.7% of the patients with type 1 (1989/90: 0%, 1994/95: 73.2%) and 96.6% of the patients with type 2 diabetes (1989/90: 0%, 1994/95: 89.7%) participated in TTP's. The incidence of acute and the prevalence of long-term complications remained constant. Results of the population-based, prospective trial to optimise patients' quality of diabetic control suggest: For patients with insulin treated type 2 diabetes mellitus, excellent treatment can be available by primary care physicians interested, educated and highly engaged in diabetes therapy. Moreover, structured diabetes therapy consisting of treatment and teaching programmes, regular self-monitoring, patients' insulin dose adjustment and patients' empowerment, should be offered to all patients with diabetes mellitus.

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