American College Of Physicians And American College Of Physicians Foundation Launch Tools To Improve Diabetes Care
04/24/07
Eat right. Exercise. Monitor
blood sugar. Take medication regularly. This is the advice physicians give
the more than 20 million Americans affected with diabetes. Yet
implementation of these recommendations is often far from ideal, putting
patients at greater risk for damage to the heart, kidneys, eyes, and feet.
In an effort to close this gap, the American College of Physicians
(ACP) and the American College of Physicians Foundation (ACPF) are
unveiling three practical tools for practicing internists who are ACP
members, other healthcare professionals on clinical practice teams, and
their patients.
These comprehensive educational tools are the culmination of an
ambitious three-year Diabetes Initiative funded by an unrestricted
educational grant from Novo Nordisk.
"The goals of providing these resources," said Vincenza Snow, MD, FACP,
Director, Clinical Programs and Quality of Care at ACP, "are to increase
awareness of the gap between current practice and acceptable standards of
diabetes care; provide educational interventions to improve diabetes care;
increase physician awareness of what constitutes high quality,
evidence-based diabetes care; and recognize medical practices that improve
their diabetes care."
The following materials are designed to help physicians and their staff
to implement team-based care strategies, provide them with practical tools
and motivate patients to implement lifestyle changes and self-management
techniques.
-- Living With Diabetes: An Everyday Guide for You and Your Family is an
innovative model for patient education and empowerment. This self-
management guide for patients covers diet, exercise, monitoring blood
sugar, insulin, and other medications. Available with text in English
or Spanish, Living With Diabetes is written in a conversational tone at
a fifth-grade reading level and includes photographs of patients with
diabetes and their families. It gives practical tips and concrete
examples of successful approaches to control diabetes. Patients can get
a copy of Living With Diabetes from their internist.
-- The ACP Diabetes Care Guide for physicians and practice teams is
intended to be used by multi-disciplinary teams providing care to
patients with diabetes. It has two components: a printed practice
manual (including special tools for better management of practice and
patients) and a CD-ROM containing electronic versions of the manual and
tools and 81 multiple-choice questions, answers, and critiques. One
hundred thousand (100,000) copies of the guide will be distributed free
to internal medicine physicians (including generalists and
endocrinologists), nurses (including nurse practitioners), physician
assistants, and diabetes educators (including nurses and dietitians).
Health care professionals can use the guide to earn continuing
education credits.
-- The Diabetes Portal (http://diabetes.acponline.org) is a free Web-based
resource for physicians and patients that provides tools, resources,
and research supporting diabetes care. Patients and clinicians can
access information specific to their needs. Clinicians can search for
information under the headings of quality improvement, practice issues,
and clinical topics. Information and links are updated regularly,
providing clinicians and patients with the latest evidence-based
guidance. Patient resources include information about eye, foot, heart,
and kidney complications caused by diabetes, as well as portions of
both the patient and physician guides listed above.
Both Living with Diabetes and the ACP Diabetes Care Guide can be
ordered at
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