Use population health approaches to diabetes care. Assess long-term outcomes and address disparities. Promote wellness of the entire community and connect people to local resources, including healthy food, transportation, housing, and mental health care.
Develop a coordinated team approach to diabetes care. Team based-care should include patient education, community outreach, care coordination, tracking of health outcomes, and access to healthcare providers, nutritionists, diabetes educators, pharmacists, community health workers, and behavioral health clinicians.
Integrate kidney disease prevention and education into routine diabetes care. Screen people with diabetes for kidney disease and make sure that kidney disease is routinely addressed as part of diabetes care.
Problem
Kidney failure from diabetes was highest among Native Americans.
Native Americans are more likely to have diabetes.
Native Americans are twice as likely as whites to have been diagnosed with diabetes.
Native Americans were more likely to have kidney failure from diabetes than other races until recently.
Native Americans were nearly 5 times more likely than whites to have kidney failure from diabetes in 1996.
Reasons include: high blood sugar, high blood pressure, and significant barriers to health care.
Diabetes-related kidney failure among Native Americans decreased by 54% from 1996 to 2013.
The Indian Health Service uses population health and team-based approaches to diabetes and kidney care.
Native Americans with diabetes have had important improvements:
Use of medicines to protect kidneys increased from 42% to 74% in 5 years.
Average blood pressure in those with hypertension was well-controlled (133/76 mmHg).
Blood sugar control improved by 10%.
Kidney testing in those 65 and older was 50% higher compared to the Medicare diabetes population.
Kidney failure is a disabling and expensive complication of diabetes throughout the US.
Medical costs for kidney failure from diabetes were about $82,000 per person in 2013.
Medicare spent $14 billion to treat people with kidney failure from diabetes in 2013.
Use population health approaches to diabetes care. Assess long-term outcomes and address disparities. Promote wellness of the entire community and connect people to local resources, including healthy food, transportation, housing, and mental health care.
Develop a coordinated team approach to diabetes care. Team based-care should include patient education, community outreach, care coordination, tracking of health outcomes, and access to healthcare providers, nutritionists, diabetes educators, pharmacists, community health workers, and behavioral health clinicians.
Integrate kidney disease prevention and education into routine diabetes care. Screen people with diabetes for kidney disease and make sure that kidney disease is routinely addressed as part of diabetes care.
Health care policy leaders and insurers can:
Set standards and track performance measures requiring health plans to assess the health of all members of their population with diabetes, including those who don’t regularly visit their healthcare provider.
Promote CKD screening and monitoring and appropriate use of medicines that protect the kidneys in people with diabetes and CKD.
Support team-based care, care management, patient education, home visits, and community outreach.
Patients with diabetes and their families can:
Ask about being tested for kidney disease.
Check their blood pressure and blood sugar regularly; talk with their healthcare provider about goals.
Talk with their healthcare provider if they are having problems getting or taking their medicines.
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