Robert A. Gabbay; Debbie Kendall; Christine Beebe; John Cuddeback; Todd Hobbs; Naeem D. Khan; Sandra Leal; Eden Miller; Lucia M. Novak; Swapnil N. Rajpathak ; Paul Scribner; Luigi Meneghini ; Kamlesh Khunti
Research has shown that getting to glycemic targets early on leads to better outcomes in people with type 2 diabetes; yet, there has been no improvement in the attainment of A1C targets in the past decade. One reason is therapeutic inertia: the lack of timely adjustment to the treatment regimen when a person’s therapeutic targets are not met. This article describes the scope and priorities of the American Diabetes Association’s 3-year Overcoming Therapeutic Inertia Initiative. Its planned activities include publishing a systematic review and meta-analysis of approaches to reducing therapeutic inertia, developing a registry of effective strategies, launching clinician awareness and education campaigns, leveraging electronic health record and clinical decision-support tools, influencing payer policies, and potentially executing pragmatic research to test promising interventions.
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