Health Services and Systems Research, Duke-NUS Medical School, 8 College Road, 169857, Singapore, Singapore.
SingHealth Polyclinics, Singapore, Singapore.
Trials. 2017 Nov 17;18(1):551. doi: 10.1186/s13063-017-2288-6.
Many people with diabetes have suboptimal glycaemic control due to not being adherent to their treatment regimen. Behavioural economic theory suggests that the lack of adherence results from the disconnect between the timing of when costs and benefits accrue. One strategy to address this discontinuity is to offer patients a near-term benefit, such as a financial reward. Whereas there is evidence that rewards can improve treatment adherence and sometimes health outcomes, further research is needed to determine whether rewards are more effective when targeting processes or intermediary health outcomes. In the Trial to Incentivise Adherence for Diabetes (TRIAD) we test whether adding financial incentives to usual care can improve HbA1c levels among people with diabetes and whether the financial incentives work better when targeting processes (adherence to blood glucose testing, medication, and daily physical activity) or the primary intermediary health outcome of self-monitored blood glucose within an acceptable range.
METHODS/DESIGN: TRIAD is a randomised, controlled, open-label, single-centre superiority trial with three parallel arms. A total of 240 patients with suboptimally controlled diabetes (HbA1c ≥ 8%) from a polyclinic in Singapore are block-randomised (blocking factor: current vs. new glucometer users) into three arms, namely (1) usual care (UC) only, (2) UC with process incentive and (3) UC with outcome incentive, in a 2:3:3 ratio. Masking the arm allocation will be precluded by the behavioural nature of the intervention but blocking size will not be disclosed to protect concealment. The primary outcome (change in HbA1c level at month 6) will be measured by a laboratory that is independent from the study team. Secondary outcomes (at month 6) include the number of blood glucose testing days, glucose readings within the normal range (between 4 to 7 mmol/L), medication-adherent days, physically active days, and average incentives earned and time spent administrating the incentives.
This study will provide evidence on whether financial incentives can cost-effectively improve glycaemic control. It will also provide evidence on the benefit incidence of interventions involving financial incentives. By comparing process to outcome incentives, this study will inform the design of future incentive strategies in chronic disease management and beyond.
ClinicalTrials.gov registry, ID: NCT02224417 . Registered on 22 August 2014.
许多糖尿病患者由于不遵守治疗方案而血糖控制不佳。行为经济学理论表明,这种不依从的原因在于成本和收益发生的时间不匹配。解决这种不连续性的一种策略是为患者提供近期利益,例如经济奖励。虽然有证据表明奖励可以提高治疗依从性,有时还可以改善健康结果,但仍需要进一步研究,以确定奖励在针对治疗过程或中间健康结果时是否更有效。在激励糖尿病患者坚持治疗的试验(TRIAD)中,我们检验了在常规治疗的基础上增加经济奖励是否可以改善糖尿病患者的糖化血红蛋白水平,以及经济奖励在针对过程(血糖检测、药物和日常体力活动的依从性)或自我监测血糖范围内的主要中间健康结果时是否更有效。
方法/设计:TRIAD 是一项随机、对照、开放性、单中心优效性试验,有三个平行组。共有 240 名来自新加坡一个综合诊所的血糖控制不理想(糖化血红蛋白≥8%)的患者按现行血糖仪使用者和新血糖仪使用者(分组因素)进行分层,然后按 2:3:3 的比例随机分配到三个组,即(1)仅常规治疗(UC),(2)UC 加过程激励,(3)UC 加结果激励。由于干预措施的行为性质,无法对分组进行盲法,但不会披露分组大小以保护隐匿性。主要结局(第 6 个月时糖化血红蛋白水平的变化)将由独立于研究团队的实验室进行测量。次要结局(第 6 个月)包括血糖检测天数、血糖读数在正常范围内(4 至 7mmol/L 之间)、服药天数、体力活动天数,以及平均获得的奖励和分配奖励所花费的时间。
这项研究将提供经济奖励是否能以成本效益的方式改善血糖控制的证据。它还将提供涉及经济奖励的干预措施的效益发生的证据。通过比较过程激励和结果激励,这项研究将为未来慢性病管理及其他领域的激励策略设计提供信息。
ClinicalTrials.gov 注册,ID:NCT02224417。于 2014 年 8 月 22 日注册。