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Revision with unchanged content. Diabetes is a common and serious chronic condition. If not well-managed, significant multi-system complications often arise, resulting in increased health care utilization and poor health outcomes. There is considerable evidence that people with diagnosed diabetes are not receiving recommended care. This is the first study to examine the relationship between long-term adherence to recommended care and health care utilization. Patients with higher long-term adherence used an increased level of physician resources but a lower level of acute care resources. The…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Revision with unchanged content. Diabetes is a common and serious chronic condition. If not well-managed, significant multi-system complications often arise, resulting in increased health care utilization and poor health outcomes. There is considerable evidence that people with diagnosed diabetes are not receiving recommended care. This is the first study to examine the relationship between long-term adherence to recommended care and health care utilization. Patients with higher long-term adherence used an increased level of physician resources but a lower level of acute care resources. The utilization difference related to adherence was particularly noticeable in older adults with higher levels of morbidity, resulting in both less frequent hospitalizations and, when they were hospitalized, shorter lengths of stay in hospital. The findings of this study indicate that improving long-term adherence may result in the avoidance of $4 in acute care costs for every additional $1 spent on physician costs.
Autorenporträt
PhD, graduated from the University of British Columbia in 2006 with a PhD in Health Care and Epidemiology. He is currently the President of H. Krueger & Associates Inc. (www.krueger.ca), an independent consulting company with a specialty in preparing business cases and economic analysis for evolving health technologies and programs.