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Evaluative research on pharmacist managed diabetes care: focus on self-monitoring of blood glucose
Sealy, P I; Ignacio, D N; Legal, G.
Affiliation
  • Sealy, P I; The University of the West Indies. Faculty of Medical Sciences. School of Pharmacy. St. Augustine. TT
  • Ignacio, D N; The University of the West Indies. Faculty of Medical Sciences. School of Pharmacy. St. Augustine. TT
  • Legal, G; The University of the West Indies. Faculty of Medical Sciences. School of Medicine. St. Augustine. TT
In. Faculty of Medical Sciences. Faculty Research Day, Book of Abstracts. St. Augustine, The University of the West Indies, November 9, 2017. .
Non-conventional in English | MedCarib | ID: biblio-1007038
Responsible library: TT5
ABSTRACT
Diabetes, especially Type 2 Diabetes (90%) is an ongoing problem for many nations. The world-wide prevalence of diabetes estimated by World Health Organization was approximately 175 million in 2000 and is predicted to be at least 366 million by 2030 among adults ≥ 20 years of age. The WHO estimate for Trinidad and Tobago in 2000 was 60,000 and is projected to increase to 125,000 if current trends prevail. Recent data (unpublished) from the Ministry of Health indicate that the Chronic Disease Assistance Programme, since its inception in 2003 to 2009, has provided medicines for approximately 226,435 diabetic patients. The National Insurance Property Development Company procures and manages the distribution of medicines for Chronic Disease Assistance Programme on behalf of the Ministry of Health. The total cost of diabetes treatment amounted to 285 million USD, representing approximately 38% of the total patient population receiving treatment through the progamme in this period.

Objective:

The primary objective was to demonstrate that pharmacists can assist patients to achieve at least a 1% decrease in HbA1c.

Methods:

A randomized controlled Pharmacist Evaluative Research Study compared the efficacy of pharmacist managed care (the intervention), and routine standard management (control) of poorly controlled (abnormal glycosylated haemoglobin, blood pressure, blood glucose and lipid panel) adult diabetic patients. Participants in the intervention group met with the pharmacist at their respective primary care sites on a regular basis for an assessment of adherence to medications, barriers to adherence and education. Control group participants consisted of patients receiving routine care by their primary physician but, with no direct intervention by the pharmacist except for the filling of prescriptions.

Results:

Seventy-five (75) patients were initially recruited, of these forty-eight (48) [20 interventions and 28 control] met the inclusion criteria. It was only possible to analyse the result from twenty (20) patients 14 (70%) intervention and 6 (21.4%) control because of incomplete collected data. A minimum decrease of at least 1% HbA1c was obtained by eight (57%) intervention participants compared to two (33%) in the control group; while HbA1c remained unchanged for two participants each in the intervention and control groups (14% and 33%, respectively). The patient cohort was too small, therefore better methods for recruitment needed to be explored. The failure of patients to document key measurements (SMGB, BP), as requested by the pharmacist, was responsible for the exclusion of these patients in the statistical analysis. All of these factors reinforced the importance of preventing patients from absconding in order to reduce the high attrition rate.

Conclusion:

The data supports the hypothesis that the use of pharmacists as adjunctive healthcare practitioners achieves better patient outcomes than the non-use of pharmacists.
Subject(s)
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Collection: International databases Health context: SDG3 - Health and Well-Being Health problem: Target 3.8 Achieve universal access to health Database: MedCarib Main subject: Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring / Diabetes Mellitus Type of study: Controlled clinical trial / Prognostic study / Risk factors Limits: Female / Humans / Male Country/Region as subject: English Caribbean / Trinidad and Tobago Language: English Year: 2017 Document type: Non-conventional Institution/Affiliation country: The University of the West Indies/TT
Search on Google
Collection: International databases Health context: SDG3 - Health and Well-Being Health problem: Target 3.8 Achieve universal access to health Database: MedCarib Main subject: Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring / Diabetes Mellitus Type of study: Controlled clinical trial / Prognostic study / Risk factors Limits: Female / Humans / Male Country/Region as subject: English Caribbean / Trinidad and Tobago Language: English Year: 2017 Document type: Non-conventional Institution/Affiliation country: The University of the West Indies/TT
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