Zhongguo quanke yixue (Dec 2023)

The Management Effect of Diabetes "1358 model" on Community Diabetes Patients Based on "Precision Management Combining General Care and Specialty Care"

  • YAO Yuzhong, MA Xiaojun, SONG Huan, ZHONG Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.12114/j.issn.1007-9572.2022.0562
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 34
pp. 4308 – 4314

Abstract

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Background Difficult problems such as poor diagnosis and treatment capacity of diabetes in the community, low screening rate of complications, low standardized monitoring rate of blood glucose, and low rate of blood glucose compliance are the problems that general practitioners need to think about and solve when carrying out management of diabetes patients. It is necessary to explore and innovate the standardized management mode of diabetes in the community for making general practitioners become specialists in the general practice and achieve "precision management combining general care and specialty care". Objective To understand the management effect of diabetes "1358 model" on community diabetes patients based on "precision management combining general care and specialty care". Methods A total of 212 patients with diabetes who visited the outpatient clinic at the Hongkou District North Bund Street Community Health Service Center from May to July 2020 and had signed a contract with the community general practitioner were selected as the research subjects and divided into 106 cases in the control group and 106 cases in the intervention group by the random number table method. The patients in the control group received routine follow-up management, and the patients in the intervention group received the "1358 model" of diabetes based on "precision management combining general care and specialty care". One year after the intervention, the cognitive and behavioral levels of diabetes, the attainment of key indicators and the experience of visiting community health centers were compared between the two groups. Results There was no statistically significant difference in the cognition and behavior related to diabetes management and the attainment rate of key indicators between the two groups (P>0.05). After intervention, the proportions of patients in the intervention group who monitored FPG within 1 month, monitored 2 hPG within 1 month, carried out comprehensive blood glucose monitoring within 1 month, monitored HbA1c within 6 months, carried out self-monitoring of blood glucose, recorded a blood glucose diary, standardized the use of medication, followed the doctor's advice on diet, screened for peripheral vascular complications within 1 year, screened for urinary albumin/creatinine within 1 year, screened for carotid artery plaques within 1 year, screened for the inner ocular fundus within 1 year were higher than those of the control group, and the difference was statistically significant (P<0.05) ; however, there was no significant difference in the proportions of patients with regular exercise and weekly foot examination between the two groups (P>0.05). After the intervention, the rates of FPG attainment, HbA1c attainment and ABC composite attainment of patients in the intervention group was higher than those of the control group, and the difference was statistically significant (P<0.05) ; however, there was no statistically significant difference in the 2 hPG attainment rate between the two groups (P<0.05). The proportions of patients who thought that the community diagnosis and treatment capacity was good, the community drugs basically met the demand, the community had testing equipment for blood glucose-related indexes, the community could solve the basic health problems, the community could carry out screening for complications, the community consultation and guidance for specialized diseases was convenient in the intervention group were higher than those of the control group, and the difference was statistically significant (P<0.05) . Conclusion The "1358 model" of diabetes based on "precision management combining general care and specialty care" is of positive significance in promoting and improving patients' health beliefs, standardizing blood glucose monitoring behavior, improving the rate of compliance with key indicators, and enhancing community medical experience, which can be promoted and applied in the community. This model may break through the bottleneck of insufficient resources of diabetes specialty in the community, and further improve the management level and service connotation of diabetes specialty of general practitioners.

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