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Diabetes Interprofessional Team to Enhance Adherence to Medical Care (DM I-TEAM)

18 oktober 2022 uppdaterad av: Barry Rovner, Thomas Jefferson University
The overall goal of this randomized controlled trial is to test the efficacy of DM I-TEAM (Diabetes Interprofessional Team to Enhance Adherence to Medical Care) to reduce emergency department (ED) visits and hospitalizations over 12 months in older African Americans (AAs) with diabetes mellitus (DM). DM I-TEAM is a multidisciplinary behavioral intervention that comprises a community health worker (CHW), the participant's primary care physician (PCP), a diabetes nurse educator, and a clinical geriatric pharmacist. In DM I-TEAM, the CHW conducts in-home sessions to: (1) provide diabetes education, (2) facilitate adherence to diabetes self-management behaviors (e.g., medication adherence glucose monitoring, diet, exercise); and (3) build trust between patients and their primary care team. This is accomplished by: (1) using culturally relevant diabetes educational materials; (2) facilitating telehealth visits with the participant's PCP and the diabetes nurse educator via JeffConnect; and (3) having the study pharmacist review participants' medication regimens to identify potentially inappropriate medications, simplify medication regimens if possible, and to reduce medication side effects.

Studieöversikt

Status

Avslutad

Betingelser

Intervention / Behandling

Detaljerad beskrivning

AAs have twice the rate of DM as Whites, and worse glycemic control, less optimal medication regimens, and less trust in the medical system. These disparities contribute to why AAs with DM are more likely to go blind, lose limbs, require dialysis, develop dementia, and die than Whites. These disparities, in turn, reflect racial differences in education, income, health literacy, cultural beliefs, experiences of discrimination, and social adversity, which can lead to: 1) poor glycemic control; 2) suboptimal medication use; and 3) mistrust in medical care. DM I-TEAM addresses these 3 factors, which often precipitate ED and hospital care, using a culturally relevant, multidisciplinary team treatment approach to reduce the need for high acuity medical care, and equip underserved AAs with DM with the knowledge and skill to gain the benefits of high quality medical care that is otherwise available to everyone. Our approach applies currently available treatment elements in a culturally-relevant way to create a more equitable health landscape. Our immediate goal is to engage a high-risk population in treatment that can be trusted; that recognizes the realities of their lives (e.g., financial insecurity); that improves the quality of the medication they take, and that builds their self-efficacy to manage DM. The intermediate goal is to prevent untoward medical events that necessitate ED or hospital care. The long-term goal is to reverse the pernicious racial disparities that now characterize healthcare in the U.S. DM I-TEAM can achieve these goals by getting the right care to the right patient at the right time. DM I-TEAM is the right care because its leverages existing resources in a new way to improve health outcomes in AAs with DM. AAs with DM are the right patients because many have poorly controlled DM, take suboptimal medications, and face treatment barriers, often social in nature. Now is the right time, as the population becomes more racially diverse, healthcare costs increase, and demand for safety, quality, and value intensify. In these ways DM I-TEAM is right for American healthcare, bringing us closer to Healthy People 2020's twin goals of reducing the personal and societal costs of DM, and achieving health equity for all.

DM I-TEAM takes a dynamic team approach to diabetes management whereby the primary care physician, the study pharmacist, the diabetes educator, and the CHW collaborate to build patient trust, encourage diabetes self-management, and optimize medication regimens. Each member of the team plays a pivotal role in identifying important information that prevents effective diabetes management, and then works together to provide multi-layered support to patients. The roles of each team member are as follows:

CHW: The CHW extends clinic-based care into participants' homes to strengthen patient/provider relationships, customize diabetes education, and develop tailored treatment plans. The CHW facilitates telemedicine visits with the PCP and diabetes educator to build trust in the health care system by increasing participants' access to their care team. The quality and content of these visits is enhanced by CHW-provided information about the participant's life situation (e.g., family circumstances, barriers to optimal diabetes self-management, home environment), and current self-management practices and beliefs. There will be 6 90 minute in-home CHW sessions within 3 months of randomization (telemedicine sessions will occur during 3 of these visits). Booster sessions will occur 5, 7, and 11 months after randomization. During these visits, the CHW will (1) reinforce the diabetes treatment plan articulated by the PCP, (2) gather information regarding barriers to diabetes self-management behaviors and communicate them to the team; (3) inform the team of the participant's health-related questions/issues; (4) provide culturally-relevant diabetes education using appropriate educational materials; (5) work with the participant to formulate and execute diabetes Action Plans using the principles of Behavioral Activation (BA); and (6) communicate the participant's progress with their Action Plans to the team. BA is a behavioral technique based on reinforcement theory that is used to help people overcome avoidant tendencies through goal setting, activity scheduling, and graded task assignment. BA was originally developed to treat depression. Our research has demonstrated that BA can successfully facilitate diabetes self-management. The DM I-TEAM treatment manual (which is already developed but will be refined during the study start-up phase) describes each session in detail, and includes scripts and didactics for the CHW interventionist. The manual is not included in this grant submission due to space limitations. At each session, the CHW educates participants to contact the ED (either by phone or by patient portal) prior to presenting for services. Participants are given "emergency kits" that contain glucometers and related supplies and glucose tablets. The ED physician may recommend that participant's test their glucose and treat hypoglycemia prior to or instead of reporting to the ED.

PCP: The PCP provides diabetes care as per standard practice, but care is supplemented with input from the pharmacist and the CHW, and with telemedicine visits. The PCP optimizes medication regimens based on pharmacist recommendations. As the course of treatment progresses, the PCP reinforces Action Plans with the participant during clinic visits.

Pharmacist: With information gathered by the CHW and from the participant's electronic medical records (EMR), the pharmacist performs a comprehensive evaluation of the participant's medications to identify medications that are contraindicated in older patients, are not being taken as prescribed, are being taken incorrectly, are improperly dosed, or may be causing undesirable side effects. Based on her assessment, the pharmacist may recommend that the PCP modify the current medication regimen.

Diabetes Educator: The diabetes educator provides telemedicine visits to supplement diabetes education provided by the CHW, answer participants' questions, and reinforce medication adherence.

Studietyp

Interventionell

Inskrivning (Faktisk)

200

Fas

  • Inte tillämpbar

Kontakter och platser

Det här avsnittet innehåller kontaktuppgifter för dem som genomför studien och information om var denna studie genomförs.

Studieorter

    • Pennsylvania
      • Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Förenta staterna, 19107
        • Thomas Jefferson University

Deltagandekriterier

Forskare letar efter personer som passar en viss beskrivning, så kallade behörighetskriterier. Några exempel på dessa kriterier är en persons allmänna hälsotillstånd eller tidigare behandlingar.

Urvalskriterier

Åldrar som är berättigade till studier

35 år och äldre (Vuxen, Äldre vuxen)

Tar emot friska volontärer

Nej

Kön som är behöriga för studier

Allt

Beskrivning

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. African American race
  2. Age ≥ 35 years; When first proposed the age criterion was 60 or older; it was later modified to 35 and older
  3. Type 1 or 2 DM
  4. A DM-related cause for the ED visit (i.e., hyperglycemia/hypoglycemia, diabetic ketoacidosis, chest pain, skin or soft tissue infection, diabetic neuropathy, retinopathy, urinary tract infection/pyelonephritis/acute renal injury, requesting DM medication refill) OR an hemoglobin A1c of 7.0% or greater within the past 30 days

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Evidence of cognitive and functional decline suggestive of dementia.
  2. Anti-dementia medication use
  3. Life expectancy less than one year (in the opinion of the evaluating ED physician)
  4. DSM-V psychiatric disorders other than anxiety or depression (as per EMR)
  5. Intoxicated
  6. Suicidal
  7. In police custody or currently incarcerated
  8. Undergoing medical clearance for a detox center or any involuntary court or magistrate order
  9. Lives in assisted living, currently in a rehabilitation facility (other than Jefferson), lives in a nursing home or skilled nursing facility
  10. Pregnant

Studieplan

Det här avsnittet ger detaljer om studieplanen, inklusive hur studien är utformad och vad studien mäter.

Hur är studien utformad?

Designdetaljer

  • Primärt syfte: Förebyggande
  • Tilldelning: Randomiserad
  • Interventionsmodell: Parallellt uppdrag
  • Maskning: Dubbel

Vapen och interventioner

Deltagargrupp / Arm
Intervention / Behandling
Experimentell: DM I-TEAM
DM I-TEAM is a home-based behavioral intervention that involve 9 treatment visits with a community health worker (CHW) over 12 months. During the treatment visits, the CHW provides culturally-relevant diabetes education, and facilitates telehealth visits with a diabetes nurse educator and participants' primary care physicians (PCPs). In addition, a clinical pharmacist reviews participants' medication regimens to identify potentially inappropriate medications (PIMS), and to simply regimens when indicated to facilitate medication adherence.
DM I-TEAM is a home-based behavioral intervention that involve 9 treatment visits with a community health worker (CHW) over 12 months. During the treatment visits, the CHW provides culturally-relevant diabetes education, and facilitates telehealth visits with a diabetes nurse educator and participants' primary care physicians (PCPs). In addition, a clinical pharmacist reviews participants' medication regimens to identify potentially inappropriate medications (PIMS), and to simply regimens when indicated to facilitate medication adherence.
Inget ingripande: Usual Medical Care
Usual medical care

Vad mäter studien?

Primära resultatmått

Resultatmått
Åtgärdsbeskrivning
Tidsram
Number of emergency room visits and hospitalizations over 12 months
Tidsram: 12 months
The primary efficacy analysis will consider the number of incident diabetes-related ED visits and/or hospitalizations (i.e., an "event") over 12 months after the index ED visit. Each ED visit or hospitalization is counted as a single event (although an ED visit that leads to a hospitalization is counted once). ED visits and hospitalization will be ascertained through chart reviews and subject self-report.
12 months

Sekundära resultatmått

Resultatmått
Åtgärdsbeskrivning
Tidsram
hemoglobin A1c
Tidsram: 12 months
Subjects will have their hemoglobin A1c tested using a point of care test.
12 months
Potentially Inappropriate Medications (PIMS)
Tidsram: 12 months
PIMS will be assessed via chart review by a clinical pharmacist.
12 months
Physician Trust
Tidsram: 12 months
Physician trust will be assessed with the Multidimensional Trust in Health Care Systems. This 17-item scale measures trust in physicians (e.g., "I trust my doctor's judgment"); health payers (e.g., "Healthcare payers are good at what they do"); and health care institutions (e.g., "Healthcare institutions provide high quality care").
12 months

Samarbetspartners och utredare

Det är här du hittar personer och organisationer som är involverade i denna studie.

Utredare

  • Huvudutredare: Barry Rovner, MD, Thomas Jefferson Uinversity

Publikationer och användbara länkar

Den som ansvarar för att lägga in information om studien tillhandahåller frivilligt dessa publikationer. Dessa kan handla om allt som har med studien att göra.

Studieavstämningsdatum

Dessa datum spårar framstegen för inlämningar av studieposter och sammanfattande resultat till ClinicalTrials.gov. Studieposter och rapporterade resultat granskas av National Library of Medicine (NLM) för att säkerställa att de uppfyller specifika kvalitetskontrollstandarder innan de publiceras på den offentliga webbplatsen.

Studera stora datum

Studiestart (Faktisk)

1 januari 2017

Primärt slutförande (Faktisk)

31 december 2021

Avslutad studie (Faktisk)

31 december 2021

Studieregistreringsdatum

Först inskickad

31 december 2017

Först inskickad som uppfyllde QC-kriterierna

5 januari 2018

Första postat (Faktisk)

8 januari 2018

Uppdateringar av studier

Senaste uppdatering publicerad (Faktisk)

19 oktober 2022

Senaste inskickade uppdateringen som uppfyllde QC-kriterierna

18 oktober 2022

Senast verifierad

1 oktober 2022

Mer information

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Plan för individuella deltagardata (IPD)

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Studerar en amerikansk FDA-reglerad läkemedelsprodukt

Nej

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Kliniska prövningar på DM I-TEAM

3
Prenumerera