OBJECTIVE -To identify factors related to lipid testing among patients with diabetes who receive diabetes care from primary care physicians.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS -North CarolinaMedicare claims were used to identify individuals with diabetes who received diabetes care from primary care physicians. Lipid testing was related to sociodemographic characteristics, comorbid conditions, physician specialty, and mortality.RESULTS -Based on Medicare claims from July 1997 through June 1999, 13,660 diabetic North Carolina residents with Medicare, 65-75 years of age, had received HbA 1c testing from a single primary care physician during at least three of four consecutive 6-month time intervals. During these 2 years, 31% had no lipid profile and 24% had only one lipid profile. Caucasians were 1.6 times more likely than African Americans to receive lipid profiles. Patients not receiving state Medicare assistance were 1.4 times more likely to have a lipid profile than the presumably lower-income patients receiving assistance. Patients with stroke and heart failure were less likely to receive lipid profiles. Those with no lipid profile were almost twice as likely to die from cardiovascular disease than those with at least two lipid profiles.CONCLUSIONS -Adherence to lipid testing recommendations by primary care physicians for elderly patients with diabetes has much room for improvement. The most vulnerable patients (African Americans, the economically disadvantaged, and the medically complex) are the least likely to receive lipid testing.