
At °µĶųTV Langone, diabetes care is focused on treating the whole person.
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One of the principal challenges of diabetes management is the degree of planning, discipline, and commitment it demands of those living with the condition. At °µĶųTV Langoneās Center for Diabetes and Metabolic Health, an intensified multidisciplinary approachācombined with a focus on treating the whole personāhelps patients do better at helping themselves.
A Nonhierarchical Model
In diabetes care, a team approach has long been recommended in practice guidelines. Often, however, the endocrinologist remains the patientās main caregiver, with clinicians and healthcare professionals from other fields called in as necessaryāfor example, to establish a dietary regimen or treat comorbidities and complications. Under the leadership of Lauren H. Golden, MD, clinical associate professor in the , the Center for Diabetes and Metabolic Health is working to make multidisciplinary collaboration central to each patientās treatment plan.
āOur mission is to provide individualized care that adapts constantly to a patientās changing needs and circumstances,ā explains Dr. Golden, a nationally recognized clinician, who joined °µĶųTV Langone in September 2018. āPeople who have diabetes often face challenges that make it difficult to manage the disease over time, requiring different types of reinforcement to keep them on track. Evidence shows patients can benefit from having a variety of experts helping them find tools that work at a particular juncture of their lives.ā
For this reason, Dr. Golden embraces an intensified multidisciplinary approach. āAfter patients meet with me to lay out an overall care map,ā she says, āthey have their initial consultation with a nutritionist or a diabetes educator. We then continue to alternate visits with different team members over the entire course of treatment, allowing us to continually adapt our treatment plan to the patientās evolving needs. Itās a nonhierarchical model of careāvery different from the formula of āfollow these instructions, then come back and see the doctor in three months.āā
As with some other chronic conditions, Dr. Golden observes, the obstacles to successful diabetes managementāwhether for type 1 or type 2āare frequently practical and psychological rather than pharmacological and technological. Thus, in their interactions with patients, team members are encouraged to probe beyond conventional therapeutic questions. āOur emphasis is on getting to know patients very well on multiple levels,ā Dr. Golden says. āWhat stresses are they under? Can they afford the healthy foods that weāre suggesting they eat? Are they working the night shift? Are they trying to get pregnant? If we donāt understand them as human beings, itās very difficult to guide them in how best to keep their blood sugars under control.ā
Marshaling Diverse Resources for Complex Cases
This emphasis on treating the whole patient extends to those referred by other departments in cases in which diabetes must be brought under control before a crucial procedure can take place. In other instances, diabetes presents as a complication of another disease or its treatment.
For example, the center collaborates with °µĶųTV Langoneās Transplant Institute to fast-track interventions for patients with diabetes who are preparing to receive a new organ, as well as for those experiencing post-transplant hyperglycemiaāa common adverse effect for patients with or without a history of the disease. Dr. Golden has implemented a similar arrangement with the for patients with diabetes induced by chemotherapy or pancreatectomy. āThese people need to get started on insulin quickly,ā Dr. Golden observes, ābut they also need support in complying with their treatment regimen while dealing with cancer.ā
Clinicians from the center work with colleagues from the to treat people who have nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)āa frequent comorbidity of diabetes, and one that can both exacerbate and be exacerbated by that disorder. āIf we can get these patients early and manage their diabetes, we can help them stave off cirrhosis and liver failure,ā explains Dr. Golden.
Because weight loss is the most effective approach to reversing the course of NAFLD in obese patients, Dr. Golden has built a team with specialization in liver disease, diabetes, and weight loss. She leads this effort in partnership with Ira M. Jacobson, MD, professor of medicine, director of hepatology, and a leading expert in fatty liver disease; and Holly Lofton, MD, assistant professor of surgery and medicine, and clinical lead of °µĶųTV Langoneās Weight Management Program.
āOur goal in all these efforts is to prevent the end-stage complications of diabetes, whether they affect the liver, kidneys, eyes, nerves, or vascular system,ā Dr. Golden notes. āThe resources and expertise available at °µĶųTV Langone, along with an extraordinary culture of collaboration, enable us to take an aggressive and proactive approach across a wide range of disciplines.ā