Effectiveness of an HbA1c tracking tool on primary care management of diabetes mellitus: glycaemic control, clinical practice and usability

<strong>Objective</strong> To determine if a laboratory data report (the HbA1c Tracking Tool) could be used as an effective intervention to improve diabetes management. <strong>Design</strong> A longitudinal quasi-experimental cohort design was used to test the effectiveness...

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Main Authors: Jane Howard, Ryan Sommers, Odette Gould, Michelina Mancuso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT 2009-03-01
Series:Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/713
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spelling doaj-bcc3ba9790a541dcac79cb6095e6f9512020-11-24T23:00:04ZengBCS, The Chartered Institute for ITJournal of Innovation in Health Informatics2058-45552058-45632009-03-01171414610.14236/jhi.v17i1.713655Effectiveness of an HbA1c tracking tool on primary care management of diabetes mellitus: glycaemic control, clinical practice and usabilityJane HowardRyan SommersOdette GouldMichelina Mancuso<strong>Objective</strong> To determine if a laboratory data report (the HbA1c Tracking Tool) could be used as an effective intervention to improve diabetes management. <strong>Design</strong> A longitudinal quasi-experimental cohort design was used to test the effectiveness of an HbA1c summary report sent to primary care physicians for all patients having HbA1c levels greater than 7%. Setting Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. Sample selection Administrative data from all adult patients with diabetes who had had at least two HbA1c measurements within the year prior to the initiation of the HbA1c Tracking Tool, and who had had five years of HbA1c measurements (2002-2007) overall was included. Interventions In March 2006 all primary care physicians began receiving HbA1c summary reports (through the HbA1c Tracking Tool) as a means to improving the management of diabetes. <strong>Main outcome measures</strong> (a) patient glycaemic control as indicated by HbA1c levels, (b) physician adherence to practice guidelines as indicated by measuring the mean number of HbA1c tests ordered per patient per year, and (c) physician usage rates of the HbA1c Tracking Tool in clinical practice. <strong>Results</strong> The sample (n=955)was divided into three subgroups based on flagged HbA1c level (7_&lt;8%, 8_9%, &gt;9%). The strongest effect of the intervention was found in the two groups with the poorest glycaemic control. The effect was stronger in the &gt;9% group (from 10.1 to 9.3%), than in the 8_9% group (a drop of 8.5 to 8.3%). Longitudinal analyses over a five-year period indicated the same findings. Patients were also found to receive more tests across time (from 2.45 tests per year to 3.0 across five years). In terms of usage, 92.1% of the physicians surveyed used the tool in their practice. <strong>Conclusion</strong> Routinely collected hospital laboratory data can be used both as the basis for an information- based intervention and as a tool to monitor quality of diabetes care.http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/713computerised medical records systemdiabetes mellitusglycosylated haemoglobin
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jane Howard
Ryan Sommers
Odette Gould
Michelina Mancuso
spellingShingle Jane Howard
Ryan Sommers
Odette Gould
Michelina Mancuso
Effectiveness of an HbA1c tracking tool on primary care management of diabetes mellitus: glycaemic control, clinical practice and usability
Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
computerised medical records system
diabetes mellitus
glycosylated haemoglobin
author_facet Jane Howard
Ryan Sommers
Odette Gould
Michelina Mancuso
author_sort Jane Howard
title Effectiveness of an HbA1c tracking tool on primary care management of diabetes mellitus: glycaemic control, clinical practice and usability
title_short Effectiveness of an HbA1c tracking tool on primary care management of diabetes mellitus: glycaemic control, clinical practice and usability
title_full Effectiveness of an HbA1c tracking tool on primary care management of diabetes mellitus: glycaemic control, clinical practice and usability
title_fullStr Effectiveness of an HbA1c tracking tool on primary care management of diabetes mellitus: glycaemic control, clinical practice and usability
title_full_unstemmed Effectiveness of an HbA1c tracking tool on primary care management of diabetes mellitus: glycaemic control, clinical practice and usability
title_sort effectiveness of an hba1c tracking tool on primary care management of diabetes mellitus: glycaemic control, clinical practice and usability
publisher BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT
series Journal of Innovation in Health Informatics
issn 2058-4555
2058-4563
publishDate 2009-03-01
description <strong>Objective</strong> To determine if a laboratory data report (the HbA1c Tracking Tool) could be used as an effective intervention to improve diabetes management. <strong>Design</strong> A longitudinal quasi-experimental cohort design was used to test the effectiveness of an HbA1c summary report sent to primary care physicians for all patients having HbA1c levels greater than 7%. Setting Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. Sample selection Administrative data from all adult patients with diabetes who had had at least two HbA1c measurements within the year prior to the initiation of the HbA1c Tracking Tool, and who had had five years of HbA1c measurements (2002-2007) overall was included. Interventions In March 2006 all primary care physicians began receiving HbA1c summary reports (through the HbA1c Tracking Tool) as a means to improving the management of diabetes. <strong>Main outcome measures</strong> (a) patient glycaemic control as indicated by HbA1c levels, (b) physician adherence to practice guidelines as indicated by measuring the mean number of HbA1c tests ordered per patient per year, and (c) physician usage rates of the HbA1c Tracking Tool in clinical practice. <strong>Results</strong> The sample (n=955)was divided into three subgroups based on flagged HbA1c level (7_&lt;8%, 8_9%, &gt;9%). The strongest effect of the intervention was found in the two groups with the poorest glycaemic control. The effect was stronger in the &gt;9% group (from 10.1 to 9.3%), than in the 8_9% group (a drop of 8.5 to 8.3%). Longitudinal analyses over a five-year period indicated the same findings. Patients were also found to receive more tests across time (from 2.45 tests per year to 3.0 across five years). In terms of usage, 92.1% of the physicians surveyed used the tool in their practice. <strong>Conclusion</strong> Routinely collected hospital laboratory data can be used both as the basis for an information- based intervention and as a tool to monitor quality of diabetes care.
topic computerised medical records system
diabetes mellitus
glycosylated haemoglobin
url http://hijournal.bcs.org/index.php/jhi/article/view/713
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