28 research outputs found
Patients' with type 2 diabetes willingness to pay for insulin therapy and clinical outcomes
OBJECTIVES: This study assessed patient preferences, using willingness to pay as a method to measure different treatment characteristics or attributes associated with injectable insulin therapy in patients with type 2 diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Adults with type 2 diabetes in 12 countries, diagnosed >6â
months prior and receiving insulin for >3â
months, were recruited through a representative online panel. Data were collected via online questionnaire and analyzed using a standard choice model for discrete choice experiment. RESULTS: A total of 3758 patients from North America (n=646), South America (n=1537), and Europe (n=1575) completed the study. Mean glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels in North America, South America, and Europe were 63â
mmol/mol (7.9%), 75â
mmol/mol (9.0%), and 64â
mmol/mol (8.0%), respectively. In the three regions, monthly willingness to pay was US74, and US99, US104 for one less major hypoglycemic event per year; and US37 and US47, US37, and US25, and US$24 for one less injection per day. Among respondents on basal-only insulin who had previously tried a more intensive regimen, reasons for switching back included difficulty in handling multiple injections and risk of hypoglycemic events. CONCLUSIONS: Reducing HbA1c, frequency of major hypoglycemic events and weight decrease were the highest valued outcomes in each region. The administrative burden of injections was also considered important
Thiazide-induced hyperglycaemia: a role for calcium-activated potassium channels?
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Patterns of contraception in UK women with Type 1 diabetes mellitus: A GP database study
Aim: To establish the patterns of contraceptive prescribing for women aged 15â49 with Type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM) and compare them with the patterns in women without diabetes.Methods: This was a cross-sectional study using a UK primary care database.Results: Nine hundred and thirty-eight women with a diagnosis of Type 1 DM were identified. A comparison group of women aged 15â49 without diabetes (n = 10 000) were randomly selected from the database. Twenty-five per cent of the women with diabetes and 32% without diabetes were prescribed a hormonal contraceptive in 1994. Women with Type 1 DM were more likely to be prescribed a combined oral contraceptive than a progestogen only pill (POP) but were 2.12 (95% CI 1.65â2.72) times more likely to be prescribed a POP than women without diabetes and were less likely to be prescribed a combined pill â odds ratio 0.53 (95% CI 0.44â0.64). The pregnancy rate in women with Type 1 DM over the age of 25 years was lower than for women without diabetes. Women under 25 years with Type 1 DM seemed more likely to record a pregnancy.Conclusions: Differences between women with Type 1 DM and those without diabetes highlight the variation in the way that GPs and patients evaluate the risks and benefits when deciding on contraception.<br/