AHRQ Guides Help Patients, Physicians Navigate Treatment Options for Gestational Diabetes
By News Staff
9/8/2009
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, or AHRQ, has released two new guides to help women with gestational diabetes and their physicians make informed decisions about treatment options.
AHRQ said in its Aug. 20 electronic newsletter that the guides provide the latest scientific evidence on the effectiveness and safety of drugs used to treat gestational diabetes, which affects 7 percent of pregnant women.
The consumer guide covers the various treatment options for women with gestational diabetes, including diet and exercise, insulin therapy, and use of the oral diabetes medications glyburide and metformin.
The guide also offers advice on what women should do after delivery, including having their blood sugar monitored because of an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes. Gestational diabetes usually disappears after childbirth, but 5 percent of women who have it during pregnancy develop type 2 diabetes within six months, and 60 percent develop type 2 disease within 10 years, the agency said.
The physician guide covers similar topics and also offers ratings of the evidence for each treatment type, a list of risk factors for type 2 diabetes, and other information about managing gestational diabetes and providing proper follow-up care for women who have had the condition.
Print copies of the guides can be requested from AHRQ via e-mail.
The consumer guide covers the various treatment options for women with gestational diabetes, including diet and exercise, insulin therapy, and use of the oral diabetes medications glyburide and metformin.
The guide also offers advice on what women should do after delivery, including having their blood sugar monitored because of an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes. Gestational diabetes usually disappears after childbirth, but 5 percent of women who have it during pregnancy develop type 2 diabetes within six months, and 60 percent develop type 2 disease within 10 years, the agency said.
The physician guide covers similar topics and also offers ratings of the evidence for each treatment type, a list of risk factors for type 2 diabetes, and other information about managing gestational diabetes and providing proper follow-up care for women who have had the condition.
Print copies of the guides can be requested from AHRQ via e-mail.
Clinical Care & Research
Demand Outpacing Supply of H1N1, Seasonal Flu Vaccines
One Dose of H1N1 Vaccine Immunogenic in High Percentage of Pregnant Women
FDA Revises Diabetes Drug Prescribing Information
H1N1 Vaccine Availability Increasing Slowly
ACIP Supports 'Permissive Use' of Gardasil in Males
CDC Survey Shows Overall Gains in Teens' Immunization Rates
FDA Approves Gardasil for Males, Bivalent HPV Vaccine for Girls, Women
New USP Standards for Heparin Decrease Unit Dose Potency
H1N1 Vaccine Deliveries Begin This Week
Related ANN Coverage
New Clinical Rec Says Evidence Insufficient to Support Routine Screening for Gestational Diabetes
Physicians, Patients Should Make Case-by-Case Decisions
(6/10/2009)
More From AAFP
American Family Physician: "Diagnosis and Management of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus" (Members/Paid Subscribers Only)
(July 1, 2009)
FamilyDoctor.org: "Gestational Diabetes: What it Means for Me and My Baby"
New Clinical Rec Says Evidence Insufficient to Support Routine Screening for Gestational Diabetes
Physicians, Patients Should Make Case-by-Case Decisions
(6/10/2009)
More From AAFP
American Family Physician: "Diagnosis and Management of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus" (Members/Paid Subscribers Only)
(July 1, 2009)
FamilyDoctor.org: "Gestational Diabetes: What it Means for Me and My Baby"








