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Exploring the Use of Personal Health Records in Diabetes Management A Pilot Study . Linda Wells Freiberger , FNP-C, MSN. Acknowledgments.
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Exploring the Use of Personal Health RecordsinDiabetes ManagementA Pilot Study Linda Wells Freiberger, FNP-C, MSN
Acknowledgments The project described was supported by 1 U56 AE000012-01 from the Department of Health and Human Services. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the Department of Health and Human Services.
Contextual BackgroundJUBILEE COMMUNITY HEALTH • A nonprofit(501c3) health clinic established in 1999 in Paoli, Indiana • Mission: To provide low fee-for-service primary care to uninsured populations • Partially supported through IU Health-Paoli and local community grants • Self-pay population for health care
Diabetes Costs • Estimated costs associated with diabetes as of 2007(NIH, 2011)
Diabetes • Diabetes is a serious, costly and preventable chronic disease in the US. • As of 2010, 25.8 million(8.3%) have been affected in the US (NIH, 2011). • In 2011, 10.1% of Indiana adults reported having some form of diabetes(ISDH, 2012). • Racial/Ethnic and socioeconomically disadvantaged groups experience the steepest increases and the most substantial effects from diabetes (Beckles et al, 2011)
Study Goal and Objectives • Goal • To explore the use of a PHR by rural, uninsured patients with diabetes • Objectives • Texting and PHR use to improve glucose outcomes • Shared care between clinician and patient using PHR • Methodology • Use of a convenience sample (N=28) • Pre/Post Variables Examined • A1c • Glucose levels
Results • Early findings – • most were attempting use within 1 month • After 6 months 35.7% were actively engaging in PHR use and recording glucose readings
Immediate Feedback Normal Glucose Message High Glucose Message
Benefits of Engagement • H. H. • “Oh, I will just go to the library and enter my sugar readings.” • Home PC failed during the study • Unable to afford A1c levels • Continued testing and entering glucose levels in PHR • Improved glucose: 370 110-120 mg/dl
Benefits of Engagement “I stopped eating bags of candy at one time.” K. P.
ED VISITS & ADMISSIONS 6 Months Prior 6 Months Post 7 ED visits Trauma x 2 Chest pain x 2, MI x 1 Abdominal mass Extended psych med/suicidal ideation 4 Admissions • 1 ED visit • 1 Admission
Burden of Poor Engagement and Inadequate Self-care Management • S. B. Suffered Acute MI with stent placement in September 2012 • Estimated cost stent $12,978 • Estimated hospitalization cost $5,151 • Estimated ED visit charges $334 • *Estimated Direct Variable Costs = $18,463
COST EXERCISE $20,000 Estimated cost 1 patient MI with stent $1,840,000 Estimated cost of treatment 1 uninsured patient per county in Indiana
Burden of Poor Engagement and Poor Self Care Management • E. C. Suffered amputation of a toe • Estimated total cost $11,271 • Physician $876.00 • Hospital 9880.00 (~1800.00 per day) • Anesthesia 515.00 (1 hour, 15 minutes) (http://www.healthcarebluebook.com)
Outcomes • Enhanced patient – clinician engagement • Potential to improve clinical outcomes of patients with diabetes • Uninsured populations can use Health Information Technology (HIT) tools to improveself-care management of chronic disease • Potential to reduce health care costs
THANK YOU!! • Lwells-freib@iuhealth.org • Lindawells-feib@healthlinc.org