Updated
Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jun 14
MLK Diabetes Program Cuts Amputations to 1 in 1,165 High-Risk Patients
Updated
Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jun 14

MLK Diabetes Program Cuts Amputations to 1 in 1,165 High-Risk Patients

2 articles · Updated · Los Angeles Times · Jun 14

Summary

  • Four years after launch, MLK Community Healthcare recorded just 1 amputation among 1,165 high-risk diabetes patients, with the lone case occurring less than a month after enrollment.
  • 81% of enrollees lowered blood sugar, 71% brought blood pressure under control, and appointment compliance rose to 84% from 50% under an intensive care model launched in 2021.
  • $2 million in grant funding let MLK add pharmacists, diabetes educators, community health workers, nurse care managers, produce boxes and cooking classes rather than rely on new drugs or procedures.
  • South Los Angeles faces acute need: diabetes affects 1 in 6 residents, MLK's emergency department saw 123,000 visits last year versus a 40,000-patient design, and the area has a 1,500-doctor shortage.
  • The results suggest a template for other safety-net communities, but the main grant expires next year and MLK is seeking renewed foundation support and a possible L.A. Care partnership.

Insights

Can this limb-saving diabetes program be replicated affordably, or is its success a costly one-off miracle?
Beyond saving limbs, how does tackling diabetes transform the economic health of an entire community?