To determine annual hospitalization rates for patients with diabetes mellitus, we retrospectively analyzed the frequency of hospitalization among 905 patients with diabetes receiving primary care in a private practice outpatient program during a 20-month period (1,508 patient-years). We assessed the annual hospitalization rates stratified by diabetes clinical severity index, type of diabetes, type of treatment, age, sex, and mean glycosylated hemoglobin. The all-cause annual hospitalization rate was 211 per 1,000 patients (95% confidence interval, 184 to 238). Hospitalization rates were strongly correlated with measures of clinical severity; hospitalization rates did not vary significantly with type of diabetes, age, or sex. Among patients with type II diabetes, rates were higher in the group treated with insulin. A trend was noted for hospitalization rates to increase with mean glycosylated hemoglobin (not statistically significant in this sample). Overall, 14% of hospitalizations were for metabolic reasons, 45% were related to clinical complications of diabetes, and 41% were unrelated to the presence of diabetes. In analysis of hospitalization rates and therefore health-care expenditures for patients with diabetes, the characteristics of the patient population--and especially measures of clinical severity--must be considered. Interventions to reduce hospitalization can be targeted at high-risk groups.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4158/EP.1.6.399 | DOI Listing |
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