Name
Capella University
NURS-FPX 4050 Coord Patient-Centered Care
Prof. Name
Date
Hello, I am ____. I am grateful to you all for the chance to address you on this occasion. The community care center where I work employs me as its care coordinator.. I feel privileged to be with members of the American Diabetes Association (ADA). The organization maintains its considerable impact on diabetes-affected lives by providing education and conducting advocacy work and research activities.
Our discussion centers on ethical and policy-related aspects that affect the coordination of care delivery to diabetes patients with chronic health conditions. The subject is essential for healthcare providers and patient advocacy groups because they provide essential aid during patients’ complex healthcare processes. We begin our presentation by showing why care coordination remains vital for handling chronic diseases, especially diabetes care. The analysis centers on federal policies like the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and HIPAA, which direct healthcare delivery design and protection techniques.
The next part analyzes the ethical difficulties that arise from implementing these policies, particularly when making decisions about equity and accessibility components. After presenting these points, I will outline how the Code of Ethics for Nurses helps nursing professionals to overcome such obstacles. The analysis will investigate the effects of social determinants on health. Lastly, I will present strategies combining ADA and healthcare provider efforts toward a better diabetes care continuum for the affected population.
Care coordination is a vital factor in chronic disease management because it promptly enables patients to receive proper services from different healthcare areas. Diabetes has been the seventh leading death cause, and patients require coordinated care because they need assistance from primary care providers, endocrinologists, dietitians, pharmacists, and community support programs (Sapra & Bhandari, 2023). The combination of effective care coordination minimizes complications, decreases the need for hospital admissions, and improves general patient health results. Patient involvement increases because the program supports continuous care, educational practices, and personal healthcare management. Patients receiving inconsistent follow-up care alongside fragmented healthcare services experience worse health results and rising healthcare expenses because of lacking coordinated care.
The coordination of diabetes care benefits significantly from how governments write and implement their policies. Statewide policies function as the foundational elements that create boundaries for healthcare practices that protect patient privacy, establish accessibility to treatment, and set maintenance quality standards and payment distribution systems. Healthcare providers benefit from protecting patient privacy through the foundational Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), which maintains secure health data exchange between healthcare providers (McGraw & Mandl, 2021). Multiple healthcare specialists managing diabetes require accurate patient information that they must access through platforms that let them share data to deliver effective treatments.
The ACA introduced two major changes by supporting accountable care organizations’ development and accelerating the adoption of value-based care models to enhance care coordination initiatives (Moy et al., 2023). Models under these policies promote connected care and individualized patient treatment with preventive techniques that improve diabetes management. Through these policies, the ADA can extend its mission delivery by unleashing enhanced access to diabetes education, treatments, and social resources through strategic collaborations between healthcare providers and public health networks.
Under the National ACA, the government aims to extend healthcare availability while enhancing the quality of service and controlling expenses. The ACA challenges financial constraints and healthcare clients’ freedom to make medical decisions when coordinating their care. Healthcare providers can avoid costly treatments under value-based care systems, but this approach risks contradicting patients’ needs, mostly in diabetes treatment, where distinct treatment plans are essential (Moy et al., 2023). Standard care pathways implemented by this policy trigger providers to restrict certain treatments that might differ from these pathways, thereby affecting patient-specific healthcare requirements. Research demonstrates that ACA-funded ACOs generate positive population results but practice cost-efficiency selections ahead of personalized treatment decisions, leading to ethical dilemmas regarding healthcare equity and patient autonomy (Moy et al., 2023). System efficiency must find equilibrium with patient-centered beliefs to resolve the ethical dispute.
The Texas Medicaid Managed Care program includes benefits with additional ethical issues mediating healthcare services between providers. The program promotes coordinated care for low-income populations, but diabetic patients experience variable specialized care because of lacking providers along with bureaucratic challenges. The medical care coordination standard is inequitable because disadvantaged individuals who receive
Medicaid face inferior care levels compared to insured patients (Bendicksen & Kesselheim, 2022). Healthcare beneficiaries belonging to vulnerable groups risk worsening health complications because the ethical principle of beneficence gets violated through prolonged care delays and insufficient diabetes treatment. Studies reveal that payment restrictions and administrative obstacles lead healthcare providers to leave their practices, reducing healthcare quality and service availability for vulnerable populations (Ndayishimiye et al., 2023).
The DAWN (Diabetes Awareness and Wellness Network) program of the Houston Health Department implements a local initiative based on community involvement to help diabetes patients through educational resources, wellness opportunities, and support networks (Houston Health Department, 2023). The distribution of limited resources becomes an ethical challenge for the program when determining which populations should get priority when their number exceeds what the program can handle. The distribution of free diabetes services, such as screenings, classes, and transportation help, could unintentionally exclude specific populations because of unclear or unethical allocation methods.
Public health resource distribution creates ethical challenges because of the need to decide how scarce resources should be shared based on fair principles of justice across diverse communities. Studies demonstrate that irregular financing and outreach patterns across locations produce inconsistent coordination and community support, especially within low-income residential areas (Huang et al., 2025). Public health efforts become less effective when inconsistencies diminish community faith in health interventions and maintain unnecessary health inequality gaps.
The ANA Code of Ethics for Nurses is the base standard for promoting protected coordinated care that maintains ethical standards and care safety throughout all healthcare stages. The provision 2 emphasizes that nurses prioritize the patient’s needs above all. Provision 8 highlights the importance of working with others to uphold human rights and address health disparities through culturally sensitive, person-centered care. The provisions force nurses to support patient care by prioritizing dignity and individual needs regardless of limited resources or system complexity. Through the Code, nurses participate in continuous illness management of patients with diabetes by supporting principles of beneficence, justice, non-maleficence and autonomy. The American Nurse Association (2025) confirms that following ethical guidelines enhances patient trust and communication while supporting adherence to their care plans, which are vital for managing chronic illnesses.
Healthcare disparities in care coordination and outcomes are strongly influenced by social determinants of health (SDOH), including economic stability, literacy, access,, and social support. Individuals in underserved communities often face transportation issues, food insecurity, limited health literacy, and lack of insurance, which hinder access to consistent medical care, compromising the principle of justice. The ANA Code of Ethics guides nurses to identify and address these systemic inequities by tailoring care to meet patients’ unique needs. For example, nurses coordinating care for low-income diabetic patients must advocate for access to affordable medications, educational resources, and community support programs. Research by the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) and Healthy People 2020 shows that addressing SDOH improves treatment adherence, reduces hospitalizations, and enhances the standard of life (CDC, 2024).
New and existing ethical policies require nurses to promote change through collaborative work, community outreach, and their work as policy advocates. The ADA is an organizational partner that provides vital services, including nutrition counseling, housing, assistance, and low-cost medications to reach patients. Professional nursing ethics require staff members to break through organizational obstacles that limit patient access to services and advocate for cultural practices, telehealth options, and adaptable work hours. Implementing these actions enables nurses to perform their ethical responsibilities and achieve better health results in managing chronic diseases (Chiu et al., 2021).
The presentation ends with the observation that ethical care coordination through the ANA Code of Ethics allows nurses to minimize healthcare deficiencies stemming from social health determinants. Nurses strive to achieve better healthcare results for vulnerable populations by advocating for equitable health service provision, developing inter-sector collaborations, and delivering person-centered care. Developing a medical system that provides ethical care to all patients demands ongoing ethnic nursing practice combined with continuous patient advocacy. I deeply value the time you dedicated to this matter.
American Nurse Association. (2025). Code of ethics for nurses. American Nurses Association. https://codeofethics.ana.org/home
Bendicksen, L., & Kesselheim, A. S. (2022). Anticipated efficiencies, real costs: Medicaid managed care organizations and the pharmacy benefit. Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy, 28(3), 354–361. https://doi.org/10.18553/jmcp.2022.28.3.354
CDC. (2024, January 17). Social determinants of health (SDOH). CDC.gov. https://www.cdc.gov/about/priorities/why-is-addressing-sdoh-important.html
Chiu, P., Cummings, G. G., Thorne, S., & Makaroff, K. S. (2021). Policy advocacy and nursing organizations: A scoping review. Policy, Politics, & Nursing Practice, 22(4), 276–296. https://doi.org/10.1177/15271544211050611
Houston Health Department. (2023). Diabetes Awareness and Wellness Network. Www.houstonhealth.org. https://www.houstonhealth.org/services/disease-prevention/diabetes
Huang, Y.-C., Zapien, V., Chen, Y., Le, S., Cumberbatch, A., & Valdez, C. (2025). Urban spillover, health disparities, and community strengths in small towns in central Texas. Healthcare, 13(5), 501. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13050501
McGraw, D., & Mandl, K. D. (2021). Privacy protections to encourage use of health-relevant digital data in a learning health system. NPJ Digital Medicine, 4(1), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-020-00362-8
Moy, H., Giardino, A., & Varacallo, M. (2023). Accountable care organization. PubMed Central. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK448136/
Ndayishimiye, C., Tambor, M., & Jakóbczyk, K. D. (2023). Barriers and facilitators to healthcare provider payment reform – A scoping literature review. Risk Management and Healthcare Policy, Volume 16, 1755–1779. https://doi.org/10.2147/rmhp.s420529
Sapra, A., & Bhandari, P. (2023, June 21). Diabetes. PubMed Central. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK551501/
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