Publication | Open Access
A randomized study of the impact of home health aides on diabetic control and utilization patterns.
28
Citations
7
References
1984
Year
Family MedicineUtilization PatternsNon-pharmacological InterventionPrimary CareEye Clinic AppointmentsDiabetes EpidemiologyHome Health AidesClinic AppointmentsPublic HealthManaged CareHome CareHealth Services ResearchDiabetes ManagementHealth PolicyInsulin ManagementDiabetes ComplicationsHealth EquityHealth ReimbursementHealth Care DeliveryHealth EconomicsRandomized StudyDiabetesDiabetes MellitusMedicine
Home health aides were offered to half of a group of 227 low-income diabetic clinic patients; in the group offered aides, fasting blood sugar (FBS) declined when compared to control group (10.1 mg/dl vs an increase of 5.1 mg/dl), and missed clinic appointments and emergency room use also decreased. The group of 44, who, upon offer of an aide actually accepted one, showed a significant increase in eye clinic appointments as well as the greatest decline in FBS (13.9 mg/dl).
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