Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology
Endocrine Abstracts (2012) 30 P19

BSPED2012 Poster Presentations (1) (66 abstracts)

Adolescent diabetes and emerging adulthood: effectiveness of a robust and staged joint-care transition pathway

Lakshminarayanan Varadhan 2 , Laura Lambert 1 , Joanne Hankey 1 , Tracy Fallows 1 , Julie Wilkins 1 , George Varughese 1 & Parakkal Raffeeq 1


1University Hospitals North Staffordshire NHS Trust, Stoke on Trent, UK; 2University Hospitals, Coventry, UK.


Background: An effective care pathway is required for the smooth ‘transition’ (rather than swift ‘transfer’ of care) from the paediatric to adult diabetes clinic. Engaging the patient in the service, with a clear, smooth and robust pathway, is required to bridge this very challenging period. The aim of our study was to assess the effectiveness of a staged transition process based on a shared-care protocol that has been existent over the last 3 years at our centre.

Materials and methods: The transition care happens in a two staged process

Joint transition clinic (JTC)

– Paediatric team identify patients ready for transition

– Patients seen in JTC over 3–4 appointments over a year

– Adult diabetologist and diabetes specialist nurse (DSN) sit in

– Paediatric team lead first two clinics; adult team lead subsequent clinics and transfer to the young adult clinic

Young adult clinic (YAC)

– Same adult team conduct this clinic at the same site

– Longer duration of appointments, open access to service with immediate appointments, named DSN to stay in telephonic contact

– Telephone reminder service 3 days prior to the clinic, to improve attendance rates at appointments

– Seen 1–4 times/year for up to 3 years based on clinical needs, then transfer to adult diabetes clinic

– Transition empowerment evenings: organized by both teams on an annual basis for patients/families going through the transition

– YAC also caters to young patients with new onset of diabetes (17–30 years)

The last HbA1c from paediatric clinic, JTC and YAC were taken for statistics.

Results: JTC:

31 clinics; 90 patients

266 patient appointments; 1–8/patient; 72.2% attendance rates

YAC:

35 clinics; 143 patients so far (65 from JTC, rest new referrals to the service)

254 patient appointments; 1–5/patient; 75.2% attendance rates

Transition care:

Clinic parameters
n=65Joint transition clinic (JTC)Young adult clinic (YAC)
Mean age at entry17.1 years (15.6–19.0)18.5 years (16.7–20.5)
Number of appointments/patient2.9 (1–8)2.7 (1–7)
Attendance rates72%67%
No. of patients with failure to attend at least 1 appointment52% (20 – once, 10 – twice, 2 – thrice, 2 – four)49% (17 – once, 7 – twice, 7 – thrice, 1 – four)
Failure to attend any appointment12% (1–4 appointments)6% (2–3 appointments)
Mean change in HbA1c−0.1% (−4.7 to +9.9%)+0.2% (−4.4 to +4.3%)
Proportion of patients with HbA1c worsening by >1%25%19%
Mean duration of follow up453 days (49–1323)326 days (0–763)
(n=25)
Mean HbA1c at entry9.8% (5–17.5%)9.7% (5.3–15.5%)
Mean HbA1c at exit/ last appointment9.7% (5.3–15.5%)9.8% (6.7–15.6%)
Proportion of patients with overall improved HbA1c49.2%50.8%

65 patients have been through joint transitional care

39 on-going care in YAC; 25 transferred to other services (1 for insulin pump; 2 to pregnancy clinic; 15 to adult care; 7 to primary care (4 for repeated non-attendance)); 1 died (non-diabetic complication).

Conclusion: The attendance rates in the transitional care pathway clinics are high (72% in comparison to previous adolescent diabetes clinic attendance rates of 45% prior to the introduction of this pathway), with majority getting sustained improvement in glycemic control. Our care pathway provides an effective, patient-centred, coordinated, multi-professional team based staged approach to deliver transitional care to this at-risk vulnerable group of patients.

Volume 30

40th Meeting of the British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes

British Society for Paediatric Endocrinology and Diabetes 

Browse other volumes

Article tools

My recent searches

No recent searches.