Young people with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) experience major life transitions in their late teens, around the time they lose access to paediatric health services. Subsequent poor engagement and early loss of contact with adult services has been linked to poorer self-management and outcomes.1
Adult diabetes services vary across geographical settings, but there has been little study of these different treatment models and their outcomes for transitioning young people. After puberty, microvascular complications increase, and continuing surveillance and optimal diabetes control are essential.2-4 Regional services are more likely to be general practitioner-led, with varied access to multidisciplinary specialists. Resource and staffing constraints are generally more pronounced in regional areas and there are few transition programs.5 Abrupt transfer of young people with T1DM from paediatric services to unfamiliar adult systems without structured preparation does little to encourage engagement.1,2,6-8
Adult diabetes services focus on self-management skills and avoidance of long-term complications, often predominantly targeting the majority population of older people with type 2 diabetes. Young people may not have the organisational skills needed to navigate the health care system,9 may experience difficulties,1,10 and may fail to connect or quickly lose contact with adult services.2 This has been linked with poorer self-management and diabetic control, resulting in early development of complications.4 Dedicated transition services have demonstrated improved outcomes.11
Given the increasing incidence of T1DM and high associated mortality,12 but a lack of information about service models, their uptake and outcomes, we audited the case notes of young people with T1DM in the state capital, a major city and a regional area of New South Wales to compare planned and unplanned service contacts and key diabetes-related indicators.
Glycaemic management findings were compared with World Health Organization recommended targets:
We identified 286 young people aged 18–28 years at 30 June 2008 and audited the records of 240 (84%). We audited records of all eligible subjects in the regional area (n = 74), after excluding 27 young people identified in records of paediatric services but for whom no record of contact with adult services was found. To obtain similar-sized groups in each area, we randomly sampled 80 young people from the city clinic database of 108; one patient who died from diabetic ketoacidosis before adult service uptake was audited but excluded from analysis (n = 79, 73%). Of the 104 eligible subjects in the capital, we audited all available case notes (n = 86, 83%). Across all settings, most patients (200/286, 70%) had attended paediatric services. Demographic and clinical characteristics of the 239 young people included in our analyses are shown in Box 1.
Recorded contact with doctors and DNEs differed significantly between groups in both the first year and all years (Box 2; all P < 0.001). For annual complications screening in the first year, seven (9%), 12 (15%) and 38 (44%) of the regional, city and capital subjects, respectively, had all three assessments of retinal, renal and foot health. Proportions having each assessment were significantly higher in the capital (P < 0.001) (Box 2). In both the first year and all years, total planned service use was significantly lower in the regional area than in the city and capital (P < 0.001). Recorded service contacts in the two urban areas did not differ significantly in either period. Significantly more missed appointments were recorded in the city in the first year: in the regional, city and capital cohorts, 18, 43 and 14 people missed 34, 86 and 18 appointments, respectively. This pattern held across all years (Box 2).
Both methods of examining retention of young people’s contact with services demonstrated marked early attrition in the regional cohort, with better longer-term retention of the capital cohort (Box 3). Numbers were small but, for example, 13, 7 and 12 young people appeared to still be resident in regional, city and capital areas, respectively, in Year 7, with 8, 2 and 10 of these young people in contact with their services that year.
Routine monitoring of indices of glycaemic management (BMI, BP, HbA1c) was recorded significantly less frequently for regional than urban young people, in both the first year and all years (P < 0.001) (Box 4). At least one HbA1c reading was recorded for 199 of the 239 service users (83%) in their first year of contact with an adult service, with these individuals having between one and seven measurements. In the first year, 20 (27%), 68 (86%) and 64 (74%) of the regional, city and capital subjects, respectively, had all three measurements of HbA1c, BP and BMI recorded.
Overall, there was significantly less unplanned service use for hypoglycaemia or hyperglycaemia by the capital cohort compared with the regional cohort in the first year (P = 0.010) and compared with both the regional (P = 0.002) and city (P < 0.001) cohorts in all years (Box 4). However, across all years, there were significantly more ED presentations in the city compared with the regional area (P = 0.014) or the capital (P < 0.001), with significantly fewer episodes of hospital admission in the capital than elsewhere (P = 0.011 v city, P = 0.001 v regional area).
Median HbA1c values in the first year were 9.4%, 8.7% and 8.4% in the regional area, city and capital, respectively (Box 1). Comparing values with targets recommended by the World Health Organization,13 all areas had substantial numbers of recorded HbA1c values indicative of borderline or poor glycaemic control, but there was a consistent pattern in the first year and all years of better HbA1c values among the capital cohort compared with generally poorer control among young people in the regional area (Box 5). Of a total of 467 HbA1c measurements retrieved for all three cohorts for the first year, 62 (13%) were < 7%, 111 (24%) were 7%–8%, and 294 (63%) were > 8%. A similar pattern was seen with the 1202 measurements retrieved across all years, of which 161 (13%) were < 7%, 307 (26%) were 7%–8%, and 734 (61%) were > 8%. In all years, the regional cohort had significantly more recorded values > 8% and fewer < 7% than the capital cohort (both P < 0.001). Substantial proportions of all cohorts nevertheless experienced at least one hypoglycaemic event requiring assistance (Box 4).
Similar disparities in care for rural residents have been reported from the United States.14 Many health services report resource constraints, and the particular difficulties of regional and rural areas — widely dispersed populations and health centres, limited transport and greater difficulty attracting specialist personnel — are well known. The urban services we studied had larger target populations, more specialist staff, and clinics in the public health care system capable of undertaking all or most complications screening. By contrast, as previously reported,5,15 regional diabetes services had fewer resources, heavier reliance on GPs and limited access to specialists. Distance and geographical socioeconomic factors have been acknowledged as major issues in access to diabetes services, and strong predictors of attendance.2
Our findings contrast with a report of paediatric patients in NSW, which found no difference in the metabolic control of rural and urban children (median HbA1c, 8.2% in both).16 Median HbA1c values in our three cohorts, particularly in the regional area, were substantially higher, highlighting the challenges of chronic disease self-management in early adulthood1 and the deterioration in control that occurs when young people leave the comprehensive paediatric rural outreach clinics.
Overall, we found that recorded routine service delivery fell short of that advocated in national and international guidance.4,13,17 National recommendations stipulate no less than 3–4 reviews per year for adolescents;4 adult T1DM guidelines have not been established, but we found that not even annual review was always achieved in the regional area. Potentially avoidable acute service use for crisis management represents opportunity costs that could be invested to redesign services to better meet the needs of this group.
All three settings showed evidence of poor glycaemic control. The capital service had the greatest proportion of recently diagnosed users, whose “honeymoon phase” values may have contributed to greater numbers of HbA1c readings within target ranges. However, our findings are comparable with other studies of adolescents and young adults from Australia and elsewhere.3,11,18 The risk of progression to severe diabetic retinopathy in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial follow-up study was reduced by 78% in the group originally treated intensively, demonstrating the longer-term value of good control.19 Services should consider ways to make access easier for young people and to maintain contact, as this provides the best chance of achieving better control, given that deterioration in diabetes indices around this age seems common.1 The poor retention rates demonstrated in our study and others indicate this is not occurring.2,7,20
Our findings suggest a likely mix of developmental characteristics of youth and system failures of current service models to engage, retain and support these young people. The Newcastle and Sydney services included specialised clinics for young adults, and all centres stated they were proactive in following up patients who failed to attend. However, neither strategy appears to have solved the retention problem. More important may be the manner in which clinics are run. Transitional services that address young people’s priorities and lifestyle requirements can sustain users’ engagement with services, lower drop-out rates, improve uptake of educative and preventive services,21,22 and improve diabetic control.8,11 Innovative examples such as the Maestro Project in Canada,22 which used a case management approach to service coordination and social educational networking, have shown this is achievable for young people in regional areas.
1 Demographic and clinical characteristics of 239 young people with type 1 diabetes mellitus in selected regional, city and state capital health services in New South Wales, 2008*
HbA1c in first year of contact with adult services, median (IQR) |
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2 Recorded planned health service contacts of 239 young people with type 1 diabetes mellitus a) during their first year and b) during all years of contact with adult health services*
3 Proportions of young people contacting adult health services at least once a year in each of the first 6 years of contact, estimated in two different ways
4 Recorded glycaemic management and unplanned acute service use for hypoglycaemia or hyperglycaemia of 239 young people with type 1 diabetes mellitus a) during their first year and b) during all years of contact with adult health services*
Received 8 September 2009, accepted 28 June 2010
- Lin Perry1
- Katharine S Steinbeck2
- Janet S Dunbabin3
- Julia M Lowe4
- 1 Faculty of Nursing Midwifery and Health, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, NSW.
- 2 University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW.
- 3 Newcastle Institute of Public Health, University of Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW.
- 4 Department of Endocrinology, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
We thank the staff of Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, and Hunter New England Area Health Service for their support with data access and collection. The study was funded by the NSW Institute of Rural Clinical Services and Teaching.
None identified.
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Abstract
Objective: To document diabetes health services use and indices of glycaemic management of young people with type 1 diabetes from the time of their first contact with adult services, for those living in regional areas compared with those using city and state capital services, and compared with clinical guideline targets.
Design, setting and subjects: Case note audit of 239 young adults aged 18–28 years with type 1 diabetes accessing five adult diabetes services before 30 June 2008 in three geographical regions of New South Wales: the capital (86), a city (79) and a regional area (74).
Main outcome measures: Planned (routine monitoring) and unplanned (hospital admissions and emergency department attendance for hypoglycaemia or hyperglycaemia) service contacts; recorded measures of glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c), body mass index (BMI), and blood pressure (BP).
Results: Routine preventive service uptake during the first year of contact with adult services was significantly higher in the capital and city. Fewer regional area patients had records of complications assessment and measurements of HbA1c, BMI and BP across all audited years of contact (HbA1c: 73% v 94% city, 97% capital; P < 0.001). Across all years, regional area patients had the highest proportion of HbA1c values > 8.0% (79% v 62% city, 56% capital) and lowest proportion < 7% (4% v 7%, 22%) (both P < 0.001). Fewer young people made unplanned use of acute services for diabetes crisis management in the capital (24% v 49% city, 50% regional area; P < 0.001). In the regional area, routine review did not occur reliably even annually, with marked attrition of patients from adult services after the first year of contact.
Conclusion: Inadequate routine specialist care, poor diabetes self-management and frequent use of acute services for crisis management, particularly in regional areas, suggest service redesign is needed to encourage young people’s engagement.