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The effects of a nurse case manager and a community health worker team on diabetic control, emergency department visits, and hospitalizations among urban African Americans with type 2 diabetes mellitus: a randomized controlled trial.

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Authors: Gary TL, Batts-Turner M, Yeh HC, Hill-Briggs F, Bone LR, Wang NY, Levine DM, Powe NR, Saudek CD, Hill MN, McGuire M, Brancati FL.

Although African American adults bear a disproportionate burden from diabetes mellitus (DM), few randomized controlled trials have tested culturally appropriate interventions to improve DM care. This study randomly assigned 542 African Americans with type 2 DM enrolled in an urban managed care organization to either an intensive or minimal intervention group. The intensive intervention group consisted of all components of the minimal intervention plus individualized, culturally tailored care provided by a nurse case manager (NCM) and a community health worker (CHW), using evidence-based clinical algorithms with feedback to primary care providers (eg, physicians, nurse practitioners, or physician assistants). At 24 months, compared with the minimal intervention group, those in the intensive intervention group were 23% less likely to have ER visits. In on-treatment analyses, the rate reduction was strongest for patients who received the most NCM and CHW visits. These data suggest that a culturally tailored intervention conducted by an NCM/CHW team reduced ER visits in urban African Americans with type 2 DM.

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Resource Topic: CHW Role, Care Teams, Chronic conditions, Community Case Management, Community Health Workers/Volunteers, Minority Population

Resource Type: Journal articles, Research

Year: 2009

Region:

Country: United States of America

Publisher May Restrict Access: No

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