Serving To Educate Primary Care Clinicians On Metabolic Issues
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NPACE Webinar Once-Weekly Insulins Post
I am a(n)…
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MD/DO
NP/RN
PA
Other
How many years have you been in practice?
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1-5
6-10
11-15
16-20
Over 20
What is your practice setting?
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Solo Practice
Group Practice
Hospital
Clinic
Academic
Other
Number of patients seen per month with diabetes
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1-10
11-20
21-30
31-40
41-50
Over 50
Please rate the following:
Degree to which your educational expectations were met
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Excellent
Above Average
Average
Fair
Poor
Relevance to your practice
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Excellent
Above Average
Average
Fair
Poor
Effective faculty presenter
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Excellent
Above Average
Average
Fair
Poor
Overall Presentation
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Excellent
Above Average
Average
Fair
Poor
Please rate the degree to which Learning Objectives were met.
Initiate basal insulin therapy without unnecessary delays for patients with T2D who are indicated for insulin treatment.
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Completely
Mostly
Somewhat
Not at all
Review the clinical efficacy and safety data for new and emerging ultra-long acting once weekly insulins.
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Completely
Mostly
Somewhat
Not at all
Compare and contrast the potential benefits and risks of once weekly insulins compared to traditional basal insulins.
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Completely
Mostly
Somewhat
Not at all
Agree or Disagree?
The presentation was fair and balanced, free of commercial bias.
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YES
NO
I feel more competent as a result of the presentation.
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YES
NO
The presentation was scientifically rigorous.
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YES
NO
The content contributed valuable information that will assist in improving patient outcomes
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Strongly Agree
Agree
Unsure
Disagree
Strongly Disagree
Will you change your practice behaviors as a result of the presentation?
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Absolutely
Probably
Unsure
Unlikely
No
What will you change?
Recognize and address clinical inertia
Promptly initiate basal insulin in appropriate patient
Apply evidence from clinical trials, patient preferences, and patient characteristics to select the most appropriate basal insulin
Prevent and manage hypoglycemia related to basal insulin use
Incorporate once-weekly insulins into practice when approved
Use what I have to learned to update the healthcare team.
Educate my patients
Other
If Other
Because you are likely to make changes to your practice behaviors, you are eligible to qualify for T2P (Translation to Practice) Credit, an additional 2.0 Credits. Please provide your email address below and we will send you a link to a followup survey in six weeks. If you have made changes to your practice behaviors, you will receive those additional two credits.
What barriers to change do you foresee?
Cost
Insurance Coverage
Formulary
Patient Compliance
Time with Patient
Other
If Other
What was your level of knowledge on this subject?
Before the presentation
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None
Little
Some
Considerable
Expert
After the presentation
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None
Little
Some
Considerable
Expert
Which of the following is true about once-weekly insulins compared to once-daily basal insulins?
Once-weekly insulins have significantly higher risk of severe hypoglycemia than once-daily basal insulins
Once-weekly insulins can improve adherence due to less frequent injections
Once-weekly insulins are associated with worse clinical inertia due to fewer opportunities for dose adjustments
Missing a dose of once-weekly insulins tends to result in worse blood glucose control than missing a dose of once-daily basal insulins
Which of the following patients would likely be the best candidate to receive a once-weekly insulin?
A 23-year-old man with newly diagnosed T2D, A1c 8.5%
A 59-year-old woman with T2D who takes basal insulin along with other glucose-lowering agents and is concerned about weight gain, A1c 7.1%
A 41-year-old man with T2D who takes metformin and a once-weekly GLP-1 RA with an A1c of 6.5%
A 52-year-old woman with T2D who likes to travel and frequently misses doses of her daily basal insulin, A1c 8.2%
How confident do you feel in your answer to the previous question?
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Very confident
Confident
Somewhat confident
Not confident
What would you like to learn more about on this subject?
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