posted on 2025-10-23, 19:24authored byElizabeth A. Beverly, Anirudh Prabu, Joshua J. Joseph, Douglas Einstadter, Jordan Fiegl, Thomas E. Love, Katherine Jenkins, Allison Lorenz, Shah Jalal Uddin, Michael W. Konstan, Mary S. Applegate, Shari D. Bolen, Kathleen M. Dungan, Diabetes Quality Improvement Collaborative
<p dir="ltr">Medication adherence is a barrier to achieving glycemic goals among Medicaid recipients with diabetes. The Diabetes Quality Improvement Program Collaborative recruited 19 primary care practices serving a high volume of Medicaid patients in Ohio with the goal of reducing the percentage of adults with type 2 diabetes with A1C >9.0% through a 1-year intervention. The mean medication possession ratio (MPR) improved from 71.6% during the pre-intervention period to 74.1% at year 1 post-intervention—a relative improvement of 3.4%. Factors associated with a lower MPR included younger age, identifying as Non-Hispanic Black or Hispanic, and a pre-intervention A1C >9.0%. Although the initiative modestly improved medication adherence, addressing persistent disparities and expanding prescribing of therapies with cardiorenal benefits will be necessary to improve diabetes outcomes in the Medicaid population.</p>
Funding
Ohio Department of Medicaid x
Medicaid Technical Assistance and Policy Program a