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De-Intensification Of Blood Glucose Lowering Medication In People Identified As Being Over-Treated: A Mixed Methods Study

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posted on 2020-05-21, 15:01 authored by Huberta E Hart, Kim Ditzel, Guy E Rutten, Esther de Groot, Samuel Seidu, Kamlesh Khunti, Rimke C Vos
Aim: To evaluate if, one year after notification of possible overtreatment, diabetes care providers de-intensified glucose-lowering medications and to gain insight into the opinions and beliefs of both care providers and patients regarding de-intensification. Methods: Mixed methods using routine care data from five health-care centres in the Netherlands. Patient characteristics and medication prescription of patients, previously identified as possibly over-treated, were extracted from patients’ medical records. Opinions of care providers were obtained through interviews. Patients received questionnaires about their diabetes treatment and were asked to participate in focus groups. Results: A total of 64 elderly patients with type 2 diabetes were previously identified as possibly over-treated and included; 57.8% male, median age 75 years (IQR=72–82), median diabetes duration 12 years (IQR=8–18). De-intensification was implemented in more than half (n=36) of them. Care providers preferred person-centred care above just setting general HbA1c target values, considering patient characteristics (such as comorbidity) and patient’s preference. Patients valued glucose levels as most important in determining their treatment. Both patients and care providers felt that de-intensification should occur gradually. Conclusion: Treatment had been de-intensified in more than half of the patients (56.3%). Insight in reasons for not de-intensifying elderly patients is important since treatment for them can be “person-centred care”. De-intensification is an iterative and time-intensive process.

History

Citation

Patient Preference and Adherence 2019:13

Author affiliation

Diabetes Research Centre

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Patient Preference and Adherence

Volume

13

Pagination

1775 - 1783

Publisher

Dove Medical Press

issn

1177-889X

eissn

1177-889X

Acceptance date

2019-09-06

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-10-18

Spatial coverage

New Zealand

Language

English