Volume 16, Issue 3 pp. 197-198

The Challenges of Diabetes Care in the Dialysis Unit

Stephen D. McMurray

Stephen D. McMurray

Indiana Medical Associates, Fort Wayne, Indiana

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First published: 12 May 2003
Citations: 1
Address correspondence to: Stephen D. McMurray, MD, FACP, Indiana Medical Associates, Suite 201, 7900 West Jefferson Blvd., Fort Wayne, IN 46814-9015, or e-mail: [email protected].

Abstract

ABSTRACT Nephrologists, dialysis facilities, and payers are confronted with a new and more difficult set of challenges to effectively care for the steadily increasing number of patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) developing end-stage renal disease (ESRD). U.S. Renal Data System (USRDS) data suggest that the current care of patients with DM on dialysis is suboptimal. Recently published reports have confirmed the value of HbA1C measurements in the diabetic dialysis population, that control of blood glucose lowers mortality, and that a program of care management and diabetes education can have a significant impact on patient outcomes. As leader of the nephrology team, the nephrologist should, at a minimum, be accountable for defining who is managing the diabetes. A more systematic and educated approach to DM and its complications needs to be developed by the renal community.

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