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Articles Tagged With: diabetes

  • Food as Medicine? Follow the Evidence

    In this randomized, controlled study of more than 400 individuals with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes and food insecurity, an intensive intervention offering healthy groceries and educational efforts failed to significantly affect glycemic control but resulted in heightened engagement with preventive healthcare services in the intervention group compared to the control.

  • Food as Medicine? Follow the Evidence

    In this randomized, controlled study of more than 400 individuals with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes and food insecurity, an intensive intervention offering healthy groceries and educational efforts failed to significantly affect glycemic control but resulted in heightened engagement with preventive healthcare services in the intervention group compared to the control.

  • Monthly Calls Dramatically Cut ED Visits by Super-Utilizers

    Researchers at a Virginia hospital conducted a quality improvement project to get frequent ED visitors the care they needed and keep them out of the ED. The researchers identified the 50 top super-utilizing patients at Sentara Norfolk (VA) General Hospital’s ED in 2020 and contacted them about enrolling in a chronic care management program.

  • Telling It Like It Is: Too Many HCWs Are Unhealthy

    With more than 35 years of experience in employee health, wellness coaching, and lifestyle medicine, Leticia Nichols, NP-C, is not afraid to share a few inconvenient truths about poor diets and disease, which the healthcare system is primarily designed to treat rather than prevent.

  • Metformin Use Is Associated with Decreased Diabetes-Associated Dementia

    In two recent cohort studies, metformin use was found to decrease the risk of developing dementia in older adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus.

  • To Stress Test or Not Post-PCI

    A prespecified subgroup analysis of diabetic patients in the POST-PCI study, which randomized patients post-percutaneous coronary intervention to routine stress testing vs. standard care at one year and followed for two years, has shown that adverse cardiac outcomes and death rates were not improved by routine stress testing.

  • Atorvastatin vs. Rosuvastatin in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease

    A large trial of moderate doses of rosuvastatin vs. atorvastatin in patients with coronary artery disease has shown that both drugs are equivalent at reducing major adverse cardiovascular and cerebral events, but rosuvastatin is associated with higher rates of new-onset diabetes and cataract surgery.

  • Undiagnosed Diseases Are Common Among Young Trauma Patients

    There is a largely untapped opportunity for health systems to identify young adults with chronic diseases before they end up hospitalized for their illness. Trauma, such as car crashes, falls, assaults, and gunshot wounds, can be the entry point to the healthcare system, according to researchers.

  • Jury Awards Woman $13 Million After Botched Cosmetic Surgery

    A significant portion of the patient’s case centered not on the botched medical procedure, but on the lack of clear warnings given to the patient and lack of informed consent obtained by the physician and her team.

  • Patient Advocates Launch National Diabetes Treatment Recognition Program

    Hospitals can be evaluated based on their care for patients with diabetes during admission, stay, and discharge.