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Last Updated: Oct 11, 2012 - 10:22:56 PM
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Racial disparities exist among diabetes patients treated by the same physician

Jun 9, 2008 - 4:00:00 AM
The variation in diabetes care was not related to overall performance or the volume of black patients treated by individual physicians, the authors note. Our data suggest that the problem of racial disparities is not characterized by only a few physicians providing markedly unequal care, but that such differences in care are spread across the entire system, requiring the implementation of system-wide solutions, they write. Efforts to eliminate these disparities, including race-stratified performance reports and programs to enhance care for minority patients, should be addressed to all physicians.

 
[RxPG] Black patients with diabetes are less likely than white patients to achieve long-term control of their blood glucose, blood cholesterol and blood pressure levels, even when they are treated by the same physician, according to a report in the June 9 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.

Racial disparities in the quality of diabetes care have been previously documented, according to background information in the article. Black patients with diabetes are less likely to receive recommended components of care, including hemoglobin A1C testing (HbA1C, a measure of blood glucose control over time) and lipid testing, and to achieve treatment goals, such as controlled blood pressure, cholesterol and blood glucose levels. In addition, black patients are more likely than white patients to develop diabetes-related eye and kidney disease and to have amputations of their lower extremities. Identifying the underlying reasons and potential solutions for these differences in quality of care and outcomes is a high priority, the authors write.

Thomas D. Sequist, M.D., M.P.H., of Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates, Boston, and colleagues analyzed electronic medical records from 4,556 white patients and 2,258 black patients with diabetes treated by 90 primary care physicians in eastern Massachusetts. Each physician treated at least five black patients and five white patients; all patients were age 18 or older and had visited the physician within the last two years.

Black patients and white patients received tests of low-density lipoprotein (LDL or bad) cholesterol and HbA1C at similar rates. However, white patients were more likely than black patients to reach commonly accepted benchmarks for controlled levels of HbA1C (47 percent vs. 39 percent), LDL cholesterol (57 percent vs. 45 percent) and blood pressure (30 percent vs. 24 percent).

Patient sociodemographic factors explained 13 percent to 38 percent of the racial differences in these measures, whereas within-physician effects accounted for 66 percent to 75 percent of the differences, the authors write. Thus, racial differences in outcomes were not related to black patients differentially receiving care from physicians who provide a lower quality of care, but rather that black patients experienced less ideal or even adequate outcomes than white patients within the same physician panel.

The variation in diabetes care was not related to overall performance or the volume of black patients treated by individual physicians, the authors note. Our data suggest that the problem of racial disparities is not characterized by only a few physicians providing markedly unequal care, but that such differences in care are spread across the entire system, requiring the implementation of system-wide solutions, they write. Efforts to eliminate these disparities, including race-stratified performance reports and programs to enhance care for minority patients, should be addressed to all physicians.

(Arch Intern Med. 2008;168[11]:1145-1151. Available pre-embargo to the media at




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