As part of the diabetes cycle of care, patients with T2D should have a blood pressure measurement recorded at least six-monthly.1 As blood pressure management involves a range of pharmacological and non-pharmacological options, a multimodal team approach incorporating the whole practice can help streamline management and provide improved patient outcomes.1
Join our diabetes experts as they provide information to help you and members of your practice to optimise the review and management of blood pressure as part of the cycle of care checklist for your patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D).
In this practice-wide quality improvement exercise, we guide you through a stepwise process of reviewing and enhancing your team’s performance against a range of evidence-based benchmarks for blood pressure for patients with T2D.
This activity is available to GPs.
GPs need to join the CPD accredited program here.
How long should it take?
This education is designed to take place over multiple weeks. It does not need to be completed in one sitting. You can stop at any time, and progress will be saved. You can find education you have started on your Dashboard.
Reference
- The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP). Management of type 2 diabetes: A handbook for general practice. East Melbourne, Vic: RACGP, 2025.
This topic is one of 4 topics that form the Diabetes cycle of care quality improvement program. Access the other 3 topics here.
Learning outcomes
Presenters
A/Prof Audehm has over 35 years as a full time GP with interest in chronic disease management and quality improvement in general practice. He has close links to the Department of General Practice, University of Melbourne, and participates in research and teaching of medical students.
Dr Lim is a general practitioner and GP Principal in a small group practice in Mt Druitt. He is a past President of AMA (NSW), a Wentwest Clinical Council member and President of the Mt Druitt Medical Practitioners Association. He is co-founder of CareMonitor, a cloud-based patient provider partnership platform, and Chief Medical Advisor to PENCS. He has been heavily engaged in the Western Sydney PCMH implementation project, is a member of the Wentwest Clinical leaders group, and currently co-chairs the Western Sydney Value Based Urgent Care Subcommittee.



