Managing Type 2 Diabetes Diagnosis – Specialist Case (CSEM)

CAN-eng

$0

free

MOC - Section 1

30 min

Endocrinology

0.5 Credits

Course Description

Each year an increasing number of people worldwide are being diagnosed with diabetes with potentially devastating complications. Although the majority of patients with type 2 diabetes are diagnosed at the primary care level, there are a significant portion of patients with undiagnosed hyperglycemia who may present at specialist care for complications or other conditions. Endocrinologists, cardiologists, and nephrologists must collaborate with each other and primary care clinicians to ensure that continuity of diabetes care is maintained with all of these patients.

This program will review a patient presenting for specialist care with undiagnosed type 2 diabetes and discuss the role of specialists to collaborate to manage this patient and coordinate the transfer of care to the primary care clinician.


This program has received an unrestricted educational grant or in-kind support from Novo Nordisk A/S.

Course Details

Expiry Date: 2023-05-31

Professions: Specialist

Faculty

Kim Connelly, MBBS, PhD, FSCMR, FCCS

Celine Hout, MD, FRCPC

Accreditation

This activity is an accredited group learning activity under Section 1 as defined by the Royal College of Physicians & Surgeons of Canada for the Maintenance of Certification program. It is approved by the Canadian Society of Endocrinology and Metabolism for a maximum of 0.5 credits.

Learning Objective(s)

Upon successful completion of this continuing education module, the participant will be better able to:

  1. Determine the clinical considerations of managing a patient who was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes when having a stroke
  2. Initiate appropriate antihyperglycemic therapy to manage a patient’s diabetes and further reduces their risk of a secondary major adverse cardiovascular event (MACE)
  3. Review the steps to managing a patient with mental health disorder who is nonadherent to their treatment plan
  4. Collaborate with other specialists and primary care clinicians to review how the patient’s care team can optimize diabetes management and its complications