5 Takeaways From the Annual Meeting of Diabetes Educators
Highlights from the recent gathering of the American Association of Diabetes Educators, which met August 12-15, 2016, in San Diego, California.
The annual meeting of the
1. AADE will be a major force in delivering the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP). The announcement that Medicare plans to pay for the DPP come January 2018 didn’t take the AADE by surprise—the group has been working with CDC since 2012 to set up 44 grant-funded sites to advance the program. AADE envisions
2. Diabetes educators are greatly affected by payment reform. Because improvements in blood pressure, cholesterol, and glycated hemoglobin are ground zero for how well an accountable care organization meets
3. They are embracing their role in care coordination. Multiple sessions at AADE offered practical advice on how health systems and
4. Partnerships with primary care physicians are the next big thing. New payment models will demand that primary care practices do more to treat diabetes aggressively, and CDEs can offer a solution. One leading endocrinologist presented a
5. The eternal question: how do we get paid? Questions of how to bill for what diabetes educators do came up repeatedly, and it seems there’s a lot care that’s given without compensation. For example, AADE’s Director of Prevention Joanna Craver DiBenedetto presented survey results that showed 80% of the members are doing some type of preventive service already, but only 0.4% are being reimbursed.
Newsletter
Stay ahead of policy, cost, and value—subscribe to AJMC for expert insights at the intersection of clinical care and health economics.
Related Articles
- Promising Early Efgartigimod Response Data for Generalized Myasthenia Gravis
September 18th 2025
- Iron Dysregulation Linked to MS Progression, Review Finds
September 18th 2025
- Metabolic Issues More Common in Patients With HIV
September 18th 2025
- Barriers to Gender-Affirming Surgery Persist Despite High Satisfaction Rate
September 18th 2025