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Primary Care Diabetes Fellowship Programs: Developing National Standards
Author(s) -
Jay H. Shubrook,
Beatriz Francesca Ramirez,
Amber M. Healy,
Lenard D. Salzberg,
Sumera Ahmed,
H Feinberg,
Mark H. Schutta,
Frank Schwartz,
Cecilia C. Low Wang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
clinical diabetes
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.931
H-Index - 37
eISSN - 1945-4953
pISSN - 0891-8929
DOI - 10.2337/cd20-0055
Subject(s) - diabetology , medicine , primary care , diabetes mellitus , medical prescription , angiotensin receptor blockers , family medicine , hypoglycemia , curriculum , nursing , intensive care medicine , angiotensin converting enzyme , endocrinology , psychology , pedagogy , blood pressure
The rapid and constant increase in the number of people living with diabetes has outstripped the capacity of specialists to fully address this chronic disease alone. Furthermore, although most people with diabetes are treated in the primary care setting, most primary care providers feel under-prepared and under-resourced to fully address the needs of their patients with diabetes. Addressing this care gap will require a multifaceted approach centering on primary care training in diabetes and its complications. One-year diabetology fellowship programs are well situated to provide this training. Previous research has shown that the higher the diabetes-specific volume of patients seeing a primary care physician was, the better the quality outcomes were across six quality indicators (eye examinations, LDL cholesterol testing, A1C testing, prescriptions for ACE inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers, prescriptions for statins, and emergency department visits for hypoglycemia or hyperglycemia). Primary care diabetes fellowships have existed for many years, but the number of fellowships and fellowship positions has recently grown dramatically. This article proposes a standardized curriculum for such programs and makes the case for increasing their number in the United States.

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