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1.0.0.0 Di­a­betes and Pop­u­la­tion Health

The Amer­i­can Di­a­betes As­so­ci­a­tion (ADA) “Stan­dards of Med­i­cal Care in Di­a­betes” in­cludes ADA’s cur­rent clin­i­cal prac­tice rec­om­men­da­tions and is in­tend­ed to pro­vide the com­po­nents of di­a­betes care, gen­er­al treat­ment goals and guide­lines, and tools to eval­u­ate qual­i­ty of care. Mem­bers of the ADA Pro­fes­sion­al Prac­tice Com­mit­tee, a mul­ti­dis­ci­plinary ex­pert com­mit­tee, are re­spon­si­ble for up­dat­ing the Stan­dards of Care an­nu­al­ly, or more fre­quent­ly as war­rant­ed. For a de­tailed de­scrip­tion of ADA stan­dards, state­ments, and re­ports, as well as the ev­i­dence-‍grad­ing sys­tem for ADA’s clin­i­cal prac­tice rec­om­men­da­tions, please refer to the Stan­dards of Care In­tro­duc­tion. Read­ers who wish to com­ment on the Stan­dards of Care are in­vit­ed to do so at pro­fes­sion­al.di­a­betes.org/‍SOC.

DI­A­BETES AND POP­U­LA­TION HEALTH

Rec­om­men­da­tions

1.1 En­sure treat­ment de­ci­sions are time­ly, rely on ev­i­dence-‍based guide­lines, and are made col­la­bo­ra­tively with pa­tients based on in­di­vid­u­al pref­er­ences, prog­noses, and co­mor­bidi­ties. B

1.2 Align ap­proach­es to di­a­betes man­age­ment with the Chron­ic Care Model, em­pha­siz­ing pro­duc­tive in­ter­ac­tions be­tween a pre­pared proac­tive care team and an in­formed ac­ti­vat­ed pa­tient. A

1.3 Care sys­tems should fa­cil­i­tate team-‍based care, pa­tient reg­istries, de­ci­sion sup­port tools, and com­mu­ni­ty in­volve­ment to meet pa­tient needs. B

1.4 Ef­forts to as­sess the qual­i­ty of di­a­betes care and cre­ate qual­i­ty im­prove­ment strate­gies should in­cor­po­rate re­li­able data met­rics, to pro­mote im­proved pro­cess­es of care and health out­comes, with si­mul­ta­ne­ous em­pha­sis on costs. E

Pop­u­la­tion health is defined as “the health out­comes of a group of in­di­vid­u­als, in­clud­ing the dis­tri­bu­tion of health out­comes with­in the group”; these out­comes can be mea­sured in terms of health out­comes (mor­tal­i­ty, mor­bid­i­ty, health, and func­tion­al sta­tus), dis­ease bur­den (in­ci­dence and preva­lence), and be­hav­ioral and metabol­ic fac­tors (ex­er­cise, diet, A1C, etc.) (1). Clin­i­cal prac­tice rec­om­men­da­tions for health care pro­viders are tools that can ul­ti­mate­ly im­prove health across pop­u­la­tions; how­ev­er, for op­ti­mal out­comes, di­a­betes care must also be in­di­vid­u­alized for each pa­tient. Thus, ef­forts to im­prove pop­u­la­tion health will re­quire a com­bi­na­tion of sys­tem-‍level and pa­tient-‍level ap­proach­es. With such an in­te­grat­ed ap­proach in mind, the Amer­i­can Di­a­betes As­so­ci­a­tion (ADA) high­lights the im­por­tance of pa­tient-centered care, defined as care that is re­spect­ful of and re­spon­sive to in­di­vid­u­al pa­tient pref­er­ences, needs, and val­ues and that en­sures that pa­tient val­ues guide all clin­i­cal de­ci­sions (2). Clin­i­cal prac­tice rec­om­men­da­tions, whether based on ev­i­dence or ex­pert opin­ion, are in­tend­ed to guide an over­all ap­proach to care. The sci­ence and art of medicine come to­geth­er when the clin­i­cian is faced with mak­ing treat­ment rec­om­men­da­tions for a pa­tient who may not meet the el­i­gi­bil­i­ty cri­te­ria used in the stud­ies on which guide­lines are based. Rec­og­niz­ing that one size does not fit all, the stan­dards pre­sent­ed here pro­vide guid­ance for when and how to adapt rec­om­men­da­tions for an in­di­vid­u­al.

Sug­gest­ed ci­ta­tion: Amer­i­can Di­a­betes As­so­ci­a­tion. 1. Im­prov­ing care and pro­mot­ing health in pop­u­la­tions: Stan­dards of Med­i­cal Care in Di­a­betesd2019. Di­a­betes Care 2019;42(Suppl. 1): S7–S12
© 2018 by the Amer­i­can Di­a­betes As­so­ci­a­tion. Read­ers may use this ar­ti­cle as long as the work is prop­er­ly cited, the use is ed­u­ca­tion­al and not for prof­it, and the work is not al­tered. More in­for­ma­tion is avail­able at http://www.di­a­betesjournals .org/‍con­tent/‍license.

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2.0.0.0 Care De­liv­ery Sys­tems

2.1.0.0 Overview

The pro­por­tion of pa­tients with di­a­betes who achieve rec­om­mend­ed A1C, blood pres­sure, and LDL choles­terol lev­els has in­creased in re­cent years (3). The mean A1C na­tion­al­ly among peo­ple with di­a­betes de­clined from 7.6% (60 mmol/‍mol) in 1999–2002 to 7.2% (55 mmol/‍mol) in 2007–2010 based on the Na­tion­al Health and Nu­tri­tion Ex­am­i­na­tion Sur­vey (NHA­NES), with younger adults less like­ly to meet treat­ment tar­gets than older adults (3). This has been ac­com­pa­nied by im­prove­ments in car­dio­vas­cu­lar out­comes and has led to sub­stan­tial re­duc­tions in end-‍stage mi­crovas­cu­lar com­pli­ca­tions.

Nev­er­the­less, 33–49% of pa­tients still did not meet gen­er­al tar­gets for glycemic, blood pres­sure, or choles­terol con­trol, and only 14% met tar­gets for all three mea­sures while also avoid­ing smok­ing (3). Ev­i­dence sug­gests that progress in car­dio­vas­cu­lar risk fac­tor con­trol (par­tic­u­lar­ly to­bac­co use) may be slow­ing (3,4). Cer­tain seg­ments of the pop­u­la­tion, such as young adults and pa­tients with com­plex co­mor­bidi­ties, finan­cial or other so­cial hard­ships, and/‍or lim­it­ed En­glish proficien­cy, face par­tic­u­lar chal­lenges to goal-‍based care (5-7). Even after ad­just­ing for these pa­tient fac­tors, the per­sis­tent vari­abil­i­ty in the qual­i­ty of di­a­betes care across pro­viders and prac­tice set­tings in­di­cates that sub­stan­tial sys­temlevel im­prove­ments are still need­ed.

Di­a­betes poses a significant finan­cial bur­den to in­di­vid­u­als and so­ci­ety. It is es­ti­mat­ed that the an­nu­al cost of di­ag­nosed di­a­betes in 2017 was ≥327 bil­lion, in­clud­ing ≥237 bil­lion in di­rect med­i­cal costs and ≥90 bil­lion in re­duced pro­duc­tiv­i­ty. After ad­just­ing for inflation, eco­nom­ic costs of di­a­betes in­creased by 26% from 2012 to 2017 (8). This is at­tribut­ed to the in­creased preva­lence of di­a­betes and the in­creased cost per per­son with di­a­betes. On­go­ing pop­u­la­tion health strate­gies are need­ed in order to re­duce costs and pro­vide op­ti­mized care.

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2.2.0.0 Chron­ic Care Model

Nu­mer­ous in­ter­ven­tions to im­prove ad­her­ence to the rec­om­mend­ed stan­dards have been im­ple­ment­ed. How­ev­er, a major bar­ri­er to op­ti­mal care is a de­liv­ery sys­tem that is often frag­ment­ed, lacks clin­i­cal in­for­ma­tion ca­pa­bi­li­ties, du­pli­cates ser­vices, and is poor­ly de­signed for the co­or­di­nat­ed de­liv­ery of chron­ic care. The Chron­ic Care Model (CCM) takes these fac­tors into con­sid­er­a­tion and is an ef­fec­tive frame­work for im­prov­ing the qual­i­ty of di­a­betes care (9).

Six Core El­e­ments.

The CCM in­cludes six core el­e­ments to op­ti­mize the care of pa­tients with chron­ic dis­ease:

  1. De­liv­ery sys­tem de­sign (mov­ing from a re­ac­tive to a proac­tive care de­liv­ery sys­tem where planned vis­its are co­or­di­nat­ed through a team-‍based ap­proach)
  2. Self-‍man­age­ment sup­port
  3. De­ci­sion sup­port (bas­ing care on ev­i­dence-‍based, ef­fec­tive care guide­lines)
  4. Clin­i­cal in­for­ma­tion sys­tems (using reg­istries that can pro­vide pa­tientspecific and pop­u­la­tion-‍based sup­port to the care team)
  5. Com­mu­ni­ty re­sources and poli­cies (iden­ti­fy­ing or de­vel­op­ing re­sources to sup­port healthy lifestyles)
  6. Health sys­tems (to cre­ate a qual­i­tyoriented cul­ture)

Redefining the roles of the health care de­liv­ery team and em­pow­er­ing pa­tient self-‍man­age­ment are fun­da­men­tal to the suc­cess­ful im­ple­men­ta­tion of the CCM (10). Col­lab­o­ra­tive, mul­ti­dis­ci­plinary teams are best suit­ed to pro­vide care for peo­ple with chron­ic con­di­tions such as di­a­betes and to fa­cil­i­tate pa­tients’ self-‍man­age­ment (11-13).

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2.3.0.0 Strate­gies for Sys­tem-‍Level Im­prove­ment

Op­ti­mal di­a­betes man­age­ment re­quires an or­ga­nized, sys­tematic ap­proach and the in­volve­ment of a co­or­di­nat­ed team of ded­i­cat­ed health care pro­fes­sion­als work­ing in an en­vi­ron­ment where pa­tient-centered high-‍qual­i­ty care is a pri­or­i­ty (7,14,15). While many di­a­betes pro­cess­es of care have im­proved na­tion­al­ly in the past decade, the over­all qual­i­ty of care for pa­tients with di­a­betes re­mains subop­ti­mal (3). Ef­forts to in­crease the qual­i­ty of di­a­betes care in­clude pro­vid­ing care that is con­cor­dant with ev­i­dence-‍based guide­lines (16); ex­pan­ding the role of teams to im­ple­ment more in­ten­sive dis­ease man­age­ment strate­gies (7,17,18); track­ing med­i­ca­tion­tak­ing be­hav­ior at a sys­tems level (19); rede­signing the or­ga­ni­za­tion of the care pro­cess (20); im­ple­menting elec­tron­ic health record tools (21,22); em­pow­er­ing and ed­u­cat­ing pa­tients (23,24); remov­ing finan­cial bar­ri­ers and re­duc­ing pa­tient out-‍of-‍pocket costs for di­a­betes ed­u­ca­tion, eye exams, di­a­betes tech­nol­o­gy, and nec­es­sary med­i­ca­tions (7); as­sessing and ad­dress­ing psychoso­cial is­sues (25,26); and iden­ti­fy­ing, de­vel­op­ing, and en­gag­ing com­mu­ni­ty re­sources and pub­lic poli­cies that sup­port healthy lifestyles (27). The Na­tion­al Di­a­betes Ed­u­ca­tion Pro­gram main­tains an on­line re­source (www.bet­terdi­a­betescare.nih.gov) to help health care pro­fes­sion­als de­sign and im­ple­ment more ef­fec­tive health care de­liv­ery sys­tems for those with di­a­betes.

The care team, which cen­ters around the pa­tient, should avoid ther­a­peu­tic in­er­tia and pri­or­i­tize time­ly and ap­pro­pri­ate in­ten­sification of lifestyle and/‍or phar­ma­co­log­ic ther­a­py for pa­tients who have not achieved the rec­om­mend­ed metabol­ic tar­gets (28-30). Strate­gies shown to im­prove care team be­hav­ior and there­by cat­alyze re­duc­tions in A1C, blood pres­sure, and/‍or LDL choles­terol in­clude en­gag­ing in ex­plic­it and col­lab­o­ra­tive goal set­ting with pa­tients (31,32); iden­ti­fy­ing and ad­dress­ing lan­guage, nu­mer­a­cy, or cul­tural bar­ri­ers to care (33-35); in­te­grat­ing ev­i­dence-‍based guide­lines and clin­i­cal in­for­ma­tion tools into the pro­cess of care (16,36,37); so­lic­it­ing per­for­mance feed­back, set­ting re­minders, and pro­vid­ing struc­tured care (e.g., guide­lines, for­mal case man­age­ment, and pa­tient ed­u­ca­tion re­sources) (7); and in­cor­po­rat­ing care man­age­ment teams in­clud­ing nurs­es, di­eti­tians, phar­ma­cists, and other pro­viders (17,38). Ini­tia­tives such as the Pa­tient-‍Cen­tered Med­i­cal Home show promise for im­prov­ing health out­comes by fos­ter­ing com­pre­hen­sive pri­ma­ry care and of­fer­ing new op­por­tu­ni­ties for team-‍based chron­ic dis­ease man­age­ment (39).

Telemedicine is a grow­ing field that may in­crease ac­cess to care for pa­tients with di­a­betes. Telemedicine is defined as the use of telecom­mu­ni­ca­tions to fa­cil­i­tate re­mote de­liv­ery of health-‍re­lat­ed ser­vices and clin­i­cal in­for­ma­tion (40). A grow­ing body of ev­i­dence sug­gests that var­i­ous telemedicine modal­i­ties may be ef­fec­tive at re­duc­ing A1C in pa­tients with type 2 di­a­betes com­pared with usual care or in ad­di­tion to usual care (41). For rural pop­u­la­tions or those with lim­it­ed phys­i­cal ac­cess to health care, telemedicine has a grow­ing body of ev­i­dence for its ef­fec­tiveness, par­tic­u­lar­ly with re­gard to glycemic con­trol as mea­sured by A1C (42-44). In­ter­ac­tive strate­gies that fa­cil­i­tate com­mu­ni­ca­tion be­tween pro­viders and pa­tients, in­clud­ing the use of web-‍based por­tals or text mes­sag­ing and those that in­cor­po­rate med­i­ca­tion ad­just­ment, ap­pear more ef­fec­tive. There is lim­it­ed data avail­able on the cost-‍ef­fec­tiveness of these strate­gies.

Suc­cess­ful di­a­betes care also re­quires a sys­tematic ap­proach to sup­porting pa­tients’ be­hav­ior change ef­forts. High-‍qual­i­ty di­a­betes self-‍man­age­ment ed­u­ca­tion and sup­port (DSMES) has been shown to im­prove pa­tient selfman­age­ment, sat­is­fac­tion, and glu­cose out­comes. Na­tion­al DSMES stan­dards call for an in­te­grat­ed ap­proach that in­cludes clin­i­cal con­tent and skills, be­hav­ioral strate­gies (goal set­ting, prob­lem solv­ing), and en­gage­ment with psychoso­cial con­cerns (26). For more in­for­ma­tion on DSMES, see Sec­tion 5 “Lifestyle Man­age­ment.”

In de­vis­ing ap­proach­es to sup­port dis­ease self-‍man­age­ment, it is no­table that in 23% of cases, uncon­trolled A1C, blood pres­sure, or lipids were as­so­ci­at­ed with poor med­i­ca­tion-tak­ing be­hav­iors (“med­i­ca­tion ad­her­ence”) (19). At a sys­tem level, “ad­e­quate” med­i­ca­tion tak­ing is defined as 80% (cal­cu­lat­ed as the num­ber of pills taken by the pa­tient in a given time pe­ri­od di­vid­ed by the num­ber of pills pre­scribed by the physi­cian in that same time pe­ri­od) (19). If med­i­ca­tion tak­ing is 80% or above and treat­ment goals are not met, then treat­ment in­ten­sification should be con­sid­ered (e.g., up­ti­tra­tion). Bar­ri­ers to med­i­ca­tion tak­ing may in­clude pa­tient fac­tors (finan­cial lim­i­ta­tions, re­mem­ber­ing to ob­tain or take med­i­ca­tions, fear, de­pres­sion, or health be­liefs), med­i­ca­tion fac­tors (com­plexity, mul­ti­ple daily dos­ing, cost, or side ef­fects), and sys­tem fac­tors (inad­e­quate fol­low-‍up or sup­port). Suc­cess in over­com­ing bar­ri­ers to med­i­ca­tion tak­ing may be achieved if the pa­tient and pro­vider agree on a tar­get­ed ap­proach for a specific bar­ri­er (12).

The Af­ford­able Care Act has re­sult­ed in in­creased ac­cess to care for many in­di­vid­u­als with di­a­betes with an em­pha­sis on the pro­tec­tion of peo­ple with pre­ex­ist­ing con­di­tions, health pro­mo­tion, anddis­easepre­ven­tion(45). In­fact, health in­sur­ance cov­er­age in­creased from 84.7% in 2009 to 90.1% in 2016 for adults with di­a­betes aged 18–64 years. Cov­er­age for those ≥65 years re­mained near uni­ver­sal (46). Pa­tients who have ei­ther pri­vate or pub­lic in­sur­ance cov­er­age are more like­ly to meet qual­i­ty in­di­ca­tors for di­a­betes care (47). As man­dat­ed by the Af­ford­able Care Act, the Agen­cy for Health­care Re­search and Qual­i­ty de­vel­oped a Na­tion­al Qual­i­ty Strat­e­gy based on the triple aims that in­clude im­prov­ing the health of a pop­u­la­tion, over­all qual­i­ty and pa­tient ex­pe­ri­ence of care, and per capi­ta cost (48,49). As health care sys­tems and prac­tices adapt to the chang­ing land­scape of health care, it will be im­por­tant to in­te­grate tra­di­tion­al dis­ease-‍specific met­rics with mea­sures of pa­tient ex­pe­ri­ence, as well as cost, in as­sessing the qual­i­ty of di­a­betes care (50,51). In­for­ma­tion and guid­ance specific to qual­i­ty im­prove­ment and prac­tice trans­for­ma­tion for di­a­betes care is avail­able from the Na­tion­al Di­a­betes Ed­u­ca­tion Pro­gram prac­tice trans­for­ma­tion web­site and the Na­tion­al In­sti­tute of Di­a­betes and Di­ges­tive and Kid­ney Dis­eases re­port on di­a­betes care and qual­i­ty (52,53). Using pa­tient reg­istries and elec­tron­ic health records, health sys­tems can eval­u­ate the qual­i­ty of di­a­betes care being de­liv­ered and per­form in­ter­ven­tion cy­cles as part of qual­i­ty im­prove­ment strate­gies (54). Crit­i­cal to these ef­forts is pro­vider ad­her­ence to clin­i­cal prac­tice rec­om­men­da­tions and ac­cu­rate, re­li­able data met­rics that in­clude so­ciode­mo­graph­ic vari­ables to ex­am­ine health eq­ui­ty with­in and across pop­u­la­tions (55).

In ad­di­tion to qual­i­ty im­prove­ment ef­forts, other strate­gies that si­mul­ta­ne­ously im­prove the qual­i­ty of care and po­ten­tial­ly re­duce costs are gain­ing mo­men­tum and in­clude re­im­burse­ment struc­tures that, in con­trast to visit-‍based billing, re­ward the pro­vi­sion of ap­pro­pri­ate and high-‍qual­i­ty care to achieve metabol­ic goals (56) and in­cen­tives that ac­com­mo­date per­sonalized care goals (7,57).

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3.0.0.0 TAI­LOR­ING TREAT­MENT FOR SO­CIAL CON­TEXT

3.1.0.0 Overview

Rec­om­men­da­tions

1.5 Pro­viders should as­sess so­cial con­text, in­clud­ing po­ten­tial food in­se­cu­ri­ty, hous­ing sta­bil­i­ty, and finan­cial bar­ri­ers, and apply that in­for­ma­tion to treat­ment de­ci­sions. A

1.6 Refer pa­tients to local com­mu­ni­ty re­sources when avail­able. B

1.7 Pro­vide pa­tients with selfman­age­ment sup­port from lay health coach­es, nav­i­ga­tors, or com­mu­ni­ty health work­ers when avail­able. A

Health in­equities re­lat­ed to di­a­betes and its com­pli­ca­tions are well doc­u­ment­ed and are heav­i­ly influenced by so­cial de­ter­mi­nants of health (58-62). So­cial de­ter­mi­nants of health are defined as the eco­nom­ic, en­vi­ron­men­tal, po­lit­i­cal, and so­cial con­di­tions in which peo­ple live and are re­spon­si­ble for a major part of health inequal­i­ty world­wide (63). The ADA rec­og­nizes the as­so­ci­a­tion be­tween so­cial and en­vi­ron­men­tal fac­tors and the pre­ven­tion and treat­ment of di­a­betes and has is­sued a call for re­search that seeks to bet­ter un­der­stand how these so­cial de­ter­mi­nants influence be­hav­iors and how the re­la­tion­ships be­tween these vari­ables might be modified for the pre­ven­tion and man­age­ment of di­a­betes (64). While a com­pre­hen­sive strat­e­gy to re­duce di­a­betes-‍re­lat­ed health in­equities in pop­u­la­tions has not been for­mally stud­ied, gen­er­al rec­om­men­da­tions from other chron­ic dis­ease mod­els can be drawn upon to in­form sys­tems-‍level strate­gies in di­a­betes. For ex­am­ple, the Na­tion­al Acade­my of Medicine has pub­lished a frame­work for ed­u­cat­ing health care pro­fes­sion­als on the im­por­tance of so­cial de­ter­mi­nants of health (65). Fur­ther­more, there are re­sources avail­able for the in­clu­sion of stan­dard­ized so­ciode­mo­graph­ic vari­ables in elec­tron­ic med­i­cal records to fa­cil­i­tate the mea­sure­ment of health in­equities as well as the im­pact of in­ter­ven­tions de­signed to re­duce those in­equities (66-68).

So­cial de­ter­mi­nants of health are not al­ways rec­og­nized and often go undis­cussed in the clin­i­cal en­counter (61). A study by Piette et al. (69) found that among pa­tients with chron­ic ill­ness­es, two-‍thirds of those who re­ported not tak­ing med­i­ca­tions as pre­scribed due to cost never shared this with their physi­cian. In a more re­cent study using data from the Na­tion­al Health In­ter­view Sur­vey (NHIS), Patel et al. (61) found that half of adults with di­a­betes re­ported finan­cial stress and one-fifth re­ported food in­se­cu­ri­ty (FI). One pop­u­la­tion in which such is­sues must be con­sid­ered is older adults, where so­cial difficul­ties may im­pair their qual­i­ty of life and in­crease their risk of func­tion­al de­pen­den­cy (70) (see Sec­tion 12 “Older Adults” for a de­tailed dis­cus­sion of so­cial con­sid­er­a­tions in older adults). Cre­at­ing sys­tems-‍level mech­a­nisms to screen for so­cial de­ter­mi­nants of health may help over­come struc­tural bar­ri­ers and com­mu­ni­ca­tion gaps be­tween pa­tients and pro­viders (61). In ad­di­tion, brief, val­i­dat­ed screen­ing tools for some so­cial de­ter­mi­nants of health exist and could fa­cil­i­tate dis­cus­sion around fac­tors that significant­ly im­pact treat­ment dur­ing the clin­i­cal en­counter. Below is a dis­cus­sion of as­sessment and treat­ment con­sid­er­a­tions in the con­text of FI, home­less­ness, and lim­it­ed En­glish proficien­cy/low lit­er­acy.

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3.2.0.0 Food In­se­cu­ri­ty

FI is the unre­li­able avail­abil­i­ty of nu­tri­tious food and the in­abil­i­ty to con­sis­tent­ly ob­tain food with­out re­sort­ing to so­cially un­ac­cept­able prac­tices. Over 14% (or one of every seven peo­ple) of the U.S. pop­u­la­tion is food in­se­cure. The rate is high­er in some racial/‍eth­nic mi­nor­i­ty groups, in­clud­ing African Amer­i­can and Lati­no pop­u­la­tions, in low-‍in­come house­holds, and in homes head­ed by a sin­gle moth­er. The risk for type 2 di­a­betes is in­creased twofold in those with FI (64) and has been as­so­ci­at­ed with low ad­her­ence to tak­ing med­i­ca­tions ap­pro­pri­ately and rec­om­mend­ed self-‍care be­hav­iors, de­pres­sion, di­a­betes dis­tress, and worse glycemic con­trol when com­pared with in­di­vid­u­als who are food se­cure (71,72). Risk for FI can be as­sessed with a val­i­dat­ed two-‍item screen­ing tool (73) that in­cludes the state­ments: 1) “With­in the past 12 months we wor­ried whether our food would run out be­fore we got money to buy more” and 2) “With­in the past 12 months the food we bought just didn’t last and we didn’t have money to get more.” An affirma­tive re­sponse to ei­ther state­ment had a sen­si­tiv­i­ty of 97% and specificity of 83%.

Treat­ment Con­sid­er­a­tions

In those with di­a­betes and FI, the pri­or­i­ty is mit­i­gat­ing the in­creased risk for uncon­trolled hy­per­glycemia and se­vere hy­po­glycemia. Rea­sons for the in­creased risk of hy­per­glycemia in­clude the steady con­sump­tion of in­ex­pen­sive car­bo­hy­drate-‍rich pro­cessed foods, binge eat­ing, finan­cial con­straints to the filling of di­a­betes med­i­ca­tion pre­scrip­tions, and anxiety/de­pres­sion lead­ing to poor di­a­betes self-‍care be­hav­iors. Hy­po­glycemia can occur as a re­sult of inad­e­quate or er­rat­ic car­bo­hy­drate con­sump­tion fol­low­ing the ad­min­is­tra­tion of sul­fony­lureas or in­sulin. See Table 9.1 for drug-‍specific and pa­tient fac­tors, in­clud­ing cost and risk of hy­po­glycemia, for treat­ment op­tions for adults with FI and type 2 di­a­betes. Pro­viders should con­sid­er these fac­tors when mak­ing treat­ment de­ci­sions in peo­ple with FI and seek local re­sources that might help pa­tients with di­a­betes and their fam­i­ly mem­bers to more reg­u­lar­ly ob­tain nu­tri­tious food (74).

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3.3.0.0 Home­less­ness

Home­less­ness often ac­com­pa­nies many ad­di­tional bar­ri­ers to di­a­betes selfman­age­ment, in­clud­ing FI, lit­er­acy and nu­mer­a­cy deficien­cies, lack of in­sur­ance, cog­ni­tive dys­func­tion, and men­tal health is­sues. Ad­di­tion­al­ly, pa­tients with di­a­betes who are home­less need se­cure places to keep their di­a­betes sup­plies and ref­ri­ge­ra­tor ac­cess to prop­er­ly store their in­sulin and take it on a reg­u­lar sched­ule. Risk for home­less­ness can be as­cer­tained using a brief risk as­sessment tool de­vel­oped and val­i­dat­ed for use among vet­er­ans (75). Given the po­ten­tial chal­lenges, pro­viders who care for home­less in­di­vid­u­als should be fa­mil­iar with re­sources or have ac­cess to so­cial work­ers that can fa­cil­i­tate tem­po­rary hous­ing for their pa­tients as a way to im­prove di­a­betes care.

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3.4.0.0 Lan­guage Bar­ri­ers

Pro­viders who care for non-‍En­glish speak­ers should de­vel­op or offer ed­u­ca­tion­al pro­grams and ma­te­ri­als in mul­ti­ple lan­guages with the specific goals of pre­vent­ing di­a­betes and build­ing di­a­betes aware­ness in peo­ple who can­not eas­i­ly read or write in En­glish. The Na­tion­al Stan­dards for Cul­tu­ral­ly and Lin­guis­ti­cal­ly Ap­pro­pri­ate Ser­vices in Health and Health Care pro­vide guid­ance on how health care pro­viders can re­duce lan­guage bar­ri­ers by im­prov­ing their cul­tural com­pe­ten­cy, ad­dress­ing health lit­er­acy, and en­sur­ing com­mu­ni­ca­tion with lan­guage as­sis­tance (76). The site of­fers a num­ber of re­sources and ma­te­ri­als that can be used to im­prove the qual­i­ty of care de­liv­ery to non-‍En­glish–speak­ing pa­tients.

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3.5.0.0 Com­mu­ni­ty Sup­port

Iden­tification or de­vel­opment of com­mu­ni­ty re­sources to sup­port healthy lifestyles is a core el­e­ment of the CCM (9). Health care com­mu­ni­ty link­ages are re­ceiv­ing in­creas­ing at­ten­tion from the Amer­i­can Med­i­cal As­so­ci­a­tion, the Agen­cy for Health­care Re­search and Qual­i­ty, and oth­ers as a means of pro­mot­ing trans­la­tion of clin­i­cal rec­om­men­da­tions for lifestyle modification in re­al­world set­tings (77). Com­mu­ni­ty health work­ers (CHWs) (78), peer sup­porters (79-81), and lay lead­ers (82) may as­sist in the de­liv­ery of DSMES ser­vices (66), par­tic­u­lar­ly in un­der­served com­mu­ni­ties. A CHW is defined by the Amer­i­can Pub­lic Health As­so­ci­a­tion as a “front­line pub­lic health work­er who is a trust­ed mem­ber of and/‍or has an un­usu­al­ly close un­der­standing of the com­mu­ni­ty served” (83). CHWs can be part of a cost-‍ef­fec­tive, ev­i­dence-‍based strat­e­gy to im­prove the man­age­ment of di­a­betes and car­dio­vas­cu­lar risk fac­tors in un­der­served com­mu­ni­ties and health care sys­tems (84).

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