Western Journal of Emergency Medicine (Aug 2023)

Expanding Diabetes Screening to Identify Undiagnosed Cases Among Emergency Department Patients

  • David C. Lee,
  • Harita Reddy,
  • Christian A. Koziatek,
  • Noah Klein,
  • Anup Chitnis,
  • Kashif Creary,
  • Gerard Francois,
  • Olumide Akindutire,
  • Robert Femia,
  • Reed Caldwell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5811/westjem.59957
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 5
pp. 962 – 966

Abstract

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Introduction: Diabetes screening traditionally occurs in primary care settings, but many who are at high risk face barriers to accessing care and therefore delays in diagnosis and treatment. These same high-risk patients do frequently visit emergency departments (ED) and, therefore, might benefit from screening at that time. Our objective in this study was to analyze one year of results from a multisite, ED-based diabetes screening program. Methods: We assessed the demographics of patients screened, identified differences in rates of newly diagnosed diabetes by clinical site, and the geographic distribution of high and low hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) results. Results: We performed diabetes screening (HbA1c) among 4,211 ED patients 40–70 years old, with a body mass index ≥25, and no prior history of diabetes. Of these patients screened for diabetes, 9% had a HbA1c result consistent with undiagnosed diabetes, and nearly half of these patients had a HbA1c ≥9.0%. Rates of newly diagnosed diabetes were notably higher at EDs located in neighborhoods of lower socioeconomic status. Conclusion: Emergency department-based diabetes screening may be a practical and scalable solution to screen high-risk patients and reduce health disparities experienced in specific neighborhoods and demographic groups.