• Postgraduate medicine · May 2024

    Review

    Making treatment guideline recommendations in chronic kidney disease and type 2 diabetes more accessible to primary care providers in the United States.

    • Eugene E Wright and Susanne B Nicholas.
    • South Piedmont Area Health Education Center, Charlotte, NC, USA.
    • Postgrad Med. 2024 May 1; 136 (4): 347357347-357.

    AbstractClinical practice guidelines for the management of chronic kidney disease (CKD) associated with type 2 diabetes (T2D) are designed to assist healthcare professionals with clinical decision making by providing recommendations on the screening, detection, management, and treatment of these conditions. However, primary care practitioners (PCPs) may have clinical inertia when it comes to routinely enacting CKD and T2D guideline recommendations in their clinical practices. Guideline developers have published a range of resources with the aim of facilitating easier access to guideline recommendations to support efficient and consistent implementation into clinical practice of PCPs. Challenges remain in providing strategies to reduce inertia in the application of guideline recommendations in primary care. In this review, we explore reasons behind the low level of awareness and poor uptake of published evidence-based care approaches to the optimal management of patients with T2D and CKD. Finally, we present suggestions on strategies to improve the implementation of guideline-directed recommendations in primary care.

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