Diabetes PubMed

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home News Study Shows That Ongoing Diabetes Education Continues to Deliver Benefits

Study Shows That Ongoing Diabetes Education Continues to Deliver Benefits

Preliminary data from a study of private insurance and Medicare claims commissioned by the American Association of Diabetes Educators (AADE) reveal that ongoing diabetes education continues to deliver results in terms of better health and reduced private insurance and Medicare claims.

The new study data show that people who receive continuing diabetes education after the initial one-year period demonstrated fewer inpatient hospital admissions, and higher compliance with diabetes medications.

"The study confirms the argument that diabetes education is not a one-shot deal," said Karen Fitzner, PhD, AADE Chief Science and Practice Officer. "There are clear benefits to ongoing, long-term diabetes education that not only bend the cost curve, but improve the health of patients with diabetes."

The study was conducted by Solucia Consulting, an actuarial consulting firm and leader in managed care, disease management and predictive modeling applications.

The authors studied three years of claims data (2005-2007) from commercial insurance and Medicare plans that reflect care of 634,645 individuals with diabetes. The researchers compared claims from those who received diabetes education with those who did not. The preliminary results of this latest study, which adds a further year of experience, show that the benefits of diabetes education continue to be observed in the study population.

One year ago, AADE first presented the results of the study, which was among the first to state with statistical certainty that diabetes education reduces health care costs and improves public health.

The update to the study, presented today, demonstrates that ongoing diabetes education beyond the first year continues to yield benefits, and it bolsters the argument for additional reimbursement by Medicare and private insurers for diabetes education. Currently, Medicare pays for one hour of individual education and 9 hours of group education in the first year; and, 2 hours of group education in prior years.

In practical terms, professionally qualified diabetes educators teach individuals with diabetes and pre-diabetes the essential tools needed to control their diabetes: accurately monitoring blood glucose levels, adopting healthy eating habits, engaging in appropriate exercise, and coping with specific diabetes-related emotional and physical challenges. Professionally qualified diabetes educators are state licensed or registered health care professionals, most commonly nurses or advanced practitioners, dietitians, pharmacists, or podiatrists.

The study presented also includes an additional year of data that reinforces the initial claim that diabetes education in general reduces claims and increases compliance with medications.

About the AADE
Founded in 1973, AADE was created by and for diabetes educators. AADE is dedicated to providing our members with the tools, training and support necessary to help patients change their behavior and accomplish their diabetes self-management goals.

As a multidisciplinary professional association, AADE represents and supports the diabetes educator by providing members the resources to stay abreast of the current research, methods and trends in the field and by offering opportunities to network and collaborate with other healthcare professionals.

AADE is continuously working towards our vision of successful self-management for all people with diabetes and related conditions.

 

Bookmark and Share

Newsflash

Millions unite for diabetes awareness on World Diabetes Day 2010
Starting today, people from all corners of the world are uniting together for three days of celebration to put diabetes firmly in the public spotlight. World Diabetes Day is the best opportunity there is to draw attention to the silent killer that is diabetes.
 
Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation Launches $100 Million Initiative
The Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation announced Together on Diabetes®: Communities Uniting to Meet America's Diabetes Challenge, a 5-year, $100 million initiative to help patients living with type 2 diabetes better manage their disease beyond the doors of their doctor's office - in their homes and communities - and for the course of their disease.
 
New global survey reveals more than one in three patients fail to take insulin as prescribed
More than one in three diabetes patients skip doses or fail to take their insulin as prescribed, stating that they have done so on average three times in the last month, and 77% of physicians estimate that in reality this number could be as high as six doses*, according to the Global Attitudes of Patients and Physicians in Insulin Therapy (GAPPTM) survey, released today by Novo Nordisk.
 

Facebook Page Twitter Subscribe to Latest Diabetes PubMed facts... by Email RSS

Subscribe

Get Diabetes PubMed facts delivered by email. Enter your email address:


Delivered by FeedBurner

Who's Online

We have 8 guests online

Sponsored Links

PharmaNews.eu
PharmaNews.eu - the dynamic European pharmaceutical news engine.
www.pharmanews.eu

Advertise here