Screening for Type 2 Diabetes > Referral/Consultation Author: Lorraine Lipscombe, MD, FRCPC; Denice S. Feig, MD, MSc, FRCPC
Editorial changes - 2012-02-07
Author information and module status
Key Points
Population at Risk
Effectiveness/Harms of Screening Tests
Effectiveness/Harms of Early Treatment
Direct Evidence that Screening Reduces Adverse Outcomes
Timeline
Cost-Effectiveness
Patient Education
Referral/Consultation
Guidelines

Tables
References
Glossary
What's New
Patient Information
Additional Resources
Tools
Recommendation
Patients with evidence of severe or rapidly progressive diabetes complications should be referred to a diabetes specialist for more intensive treatment.C

Evidence:

  • There are no studies that have specifically examined the benefits of specialist care for persons with severe complications of diabetes.
  • There is some evidence that foot ulcer and avoidable hospitalization rates are reduced for patients with diabetes who were cared for by specialists (148; 149).

Comments:

  • None.

FAQs
Denice S. Feig, MD, MSc, FRCPC has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations. Lorraine Lipscombe, MD, FRCPC has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations. Sonal Singh, MD, editorial consultant, has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations.
Deborah Korenstein, MD, FACP, Co-Editor, PIER, has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations. Richard B. Lynn, MD, FACP, Co-Editor, PIER, has no financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies, biomedical device manufacturers, or health-care related organizations.


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