TY - JOUR AU1 - George Rust AU2 - Morna Gailor AU3 - Elvan Daniels AU4 - Barbara McMillan‐Persaud AU5 - Harry Strothers AU6 - Robert Mayberry AB - Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to pilot‐test the feasibility and impact of protocol‐driven point‐of‐care HbA1c testing on levels of glycemic control and on rates of diabetic regimen intensification in an urban community health center serving low‐income patients. Design/methodology/approach – The paper suggests a primary care process re‐design, using point of care finger‐stick HbA1c testing under a standing order protocol that provided test results to the provider at patient visit. Findings – The paper finds that the protocol was well received by both nurses and physicians. HbA1c testing rates increased from 73.6 percent to 86.8 percent ( p =0.40, n =106). For the 69 patients who had both pre‐ and post‐intervention results, HbA1c levels decreased significantly from 8.55 to 7.84 ( p =0.004, n =69). At baseline, the health center as a system was relatively ineffective in responding to elevated HbA1c levels. An opportunity to intensify, i.e. a face‐to‐face visit with lab results available, occurred for only 68.6 percent of elevated HbA1c levels before the intervention, vs. 100 percent post‐intervention ( p <0.001). Only 28.6 percent of patients with HbA1c levels >8.0 had their regimens intensified in the pre‐intervention phase, compared with 53.8 percent in the post‐intervention phase ( p =0.03). Research limitations/implications – This was a pilot‐study in one urban health center. Larger group‐randomized controlled trials are needed. Practical implications – The health center's performance as a system, improved significantly as a way of intensifying diabetic regimens thereby achieving improved glycemic control. Originality/value – This intervention is feasible, replicable and scalable and does not rely on changing physician behaviors to improve primary care diabetic outcomes. TI - Point of care testing to improve glycemic control JF - International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance DO - 10.1108/09526860810868256 DA - 2008-05-02 UR - https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/emerald-publishing/point-of-care-testing-to-improve-glycemic-control-O9BZ54qFJ4 SP - 325 EP - 335 VL - 21 IS - 3 DP - DeepDyve ER -