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FIELD ACTION REPORT |
The authors are with the Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Vermont College of Medicine, Burlington, Vt. Michael Gagnon also is with the Department of Information Services, Fletcher Allen Health Care, Burlington.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Charles D. MacLean, MDCM, 371 Pearl St, Burlington, VT 05401 (e-mail: charles.maclean{at}vtmednet.org).
| ABSTRACT |
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Interventions that have proven effective in the management of chronic illness have often been difficult to establish in widespread practice. The Chronic Care Model provides a framework for implementing interventions, but it is expensive and difficult to implement.
We developed a decision support system based on this model to improve the care of adults who have diabetes and receive primary care in Vermont or adjacent New York. The Vermont Diabetes Information System uses a network of community laboratories for providing data to produce flowsheets, reminders, action alerts, and population reports that are sent to primary care providers by fax and to patients by mail. Currently, 7295 patients are cared for by 124 primary care providers in 62 practices and are enrolled in a randomized controlled trial to study its effects.
| INTRODUCTION |
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The Chronic Care Model was developed as a framework for approaching the management of chronic illness from a public health perspective.24 It emphasizes the importance of bringing togetherfor an ideal clinical encountera prepared, proactive health care team and an informed, activated patient. Chronic disease registries allow for a population-based view of patients and are a central component of this model. However, the model has proved expensive and difficult to fully implement in practice. Because other implementations of the Chronic Care Model require substantial investment by the practice and major changes in the providers usual activities, we designed the Vermont Diabetes Information System (VDIS) to require a minimum of effort and no new financial resources on the part of the providers.5
| PROGRAM DESCRIPTION |
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An Oracle database was developed as a custom software application and is maintained by staff from the information systems department of the academic medical center. We wrote the clinical algorithms on the basis of the American Diabetes Association Clinical Practice Recommendations. The next step involved reaching out to providers and patients. We first recruited clinical laboratories to establish an electronic link between the lab and the VDIS. Practices that use a participating lab were then recruited. The laboratories provided the primary care providers with lists of their patients who had had an A1C test during the previous 2 years. The primary care providers reviewed their lists and deleted patients who were not under their care or were not diabetic. Eligible patients were invited by mail to participate in the study.
Population Served
The VDIS serves diabetes patients who use primary care practices. More than 97% of invited subjects agreed to participate. Eleven labs are currently linked to the system, with flowsheets, alerts, and reminders being generated for 7295 patients who are cared for by 124 physicians, nurse practitioners, or physician assistants in 62 practices.
| DISCUSSION |
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Evaluation of the VDIS is being conducted with a randomized controlled trial supported by the National Institutes of Health. Two years of observation were planned and are expected to end in late 2006. Randomization occurred at the practice level, and we have learned several important lessons thus far.
Next Steps
The next steps in the VDIS study are to complete the randomized trial. The primary outcome is the comparison of glycemic control between the control and the intervention groups. Results are expected in 2007. Assuming positive results, the system should be generalizable to other settings and conditions.
| KEY FINDINGS
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| Acknowledgments |
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Human Participant Protection
This study was approved by the University of Vermonts institutional review board.
| Footnotes |
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Contributors
All the authors designed the study. C. D. MacLean analyzed the data and was the primary author. B. Littenberg analyzed data and edited the article. M. Gagnon also edited the article.
Accepted for publication November 4, 2005.
| References |
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2. Bodenheimer T, Wagner EH, Grumbach K. Improving primary care for patients with chronic illness: the chronic care model, part 2. JAMA. 2002;288:19091914.
3. Bodenheimer T, Wagner EH, Grumbach K. Improving primary care for patients with chronic illness. JAMA. 2002;288:17751779.
4. Glasgow RE, Wagner EH, Kaplan RM, Vinicor F, Smith L, Norman J. If diabetes is a public health problem, why not treat it as one? A population-based approach to chronic illness. Ann Behav Med. 1999;21:159170.[ISI][Medline]
5. MacLean CD, Littenberg B, Gagnon MS, Reardon M, Turner PD, Jordan C. The Vermont Diabetes Information System (VDIS): study design and subject recruitment for a cluster randomized trial of a decision support system in a regional sample of primary care practices. Clin Trials. 2004;1:532544.
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