These interventions reduced drug costs and numbers of prescriptions in a managed care cohort of patients at high risk for adverse drug events due to polypharmacy. By providing clinical information, decision support, patient self-management support, and care delivery redesign some of the problems resulting from polypharmacy can be solved.
The HAP MTMP, conducted through telephone contacts, produced positive trends in improving clinical outcomes, reductions in pharmacy costs, and sustained pharmacy cost savings for patients who enrolled in the MTMP compared with patients who declined enrollment.
We attempted to determine the percentage of patients meeting Health Plan Employer Data Information Set (HEDIS) criteria for blood pressure control (< or = 140/90 mm Hg), to identify factors contributing to differences in blood pressure control among those who met HEDIS criteria and those who did not, and to assess compliance with blood pressure management recommendations established by the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC-VI) for diabetes mellitus and myocardial infarction. In this retrospective analysis, we randomly selected 502 patient records from three primary care clinics in southeast Michigan. All patients were commercial members of one health maintenance organization, 74% of whom met HEDIS criteria for blood pressure control. These patients took fewer blood pressure drugs throughout the year (p=0.023) and had lower antihypertensive drug costs than those who did not achieve HEDIS blood pressure goals (p=0.016). According to JNC-VI criteria, 46% of diabetic patients were at their blood pressure goal of below 130/85 mm Hg and 71.6% were managed with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers. Eighty-five percent of patients were taking beta-blockers after myocardial infarction. The percentage of patients achieving target blood pressure exceeded the national average and was associated with few antihypertensive drugs and low drug cost. Effective and appropriate management of blood pressure in people with diabetes remains a challenge.
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