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In the year 2009 there were 705,607 persons insured by the Social Insurance Institution for Business, 21,299 of whom could be identified as diabetes patients treated with either oral medication and/or insulin.
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We performed multivariable regression analyses for the population thatintensified therapy with either oral medications or insulin to examine patient characteristics associated with improvement in A1C.
This sample was comprised of overweight and obese adults, primarily African American and female with long-standing diabetes controlled primarily with either oral medications only or a combination of oral medications and insulin.
Maintaining a normal blood glucose level in type 2 diabetics by use of either oral medications or insulin will only fulfill the guideline requirements and will not achieve any long term benefits.
We found that 48% of patients using diet/exercise therapy alone or oral antihyperglycemic medications and with baseline A1C >7.2% intensified therapy with either oral medications or insulin: 70% added one or more classes of oral antihyperglycemic medications and 30% began insulin.
Patients with WHO functional class III are treated with either an oral medication or a prostacyclin analog (inhaled or parenteral).
Entry criteria for the study included the ability to read and write in English, a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes, a prescription for medication to treat hyperglycemia (either insulin or oral medication) and taking oral medication for diabetes or a diabetes-related condition (i.e., hypercholesterolemia or hypertension), and age between 18 and 70 years.
Inclusion criteria were a self-reported diagnosis of diabetes, either treated with oral medication(s) or diet-controlled; age >21 years; an average systolic BP (SBP) <150 mmHg and diastolic BP DBPP) <90 mmHg during two screening visits; and a quantified level of proteinuria greater than or equal to trace but <4+ on urine dipstick analysis during screening.
Injections of insulin may either be added to oral medication or used alone.
Management of DM integrates both lifestyle changes and anti-diabetic medication (either oral drugs or insulin).
Second, a large portion of participants who required treatment were excluded from our primary outcome (completion of three doses of penicillin 'on time'), either because they were prescribed oral medication or were referred elsewhere to receive penicillin treatment, and we were not able to assess their adherence.
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