1 Department of Emergency Medicine, Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern California , Los Angeles, California.
2 Department of Community Health Sciences, University of California Los Angeles Jonathan and Karin Fielding School of Public Health , Los Angeles, California.
Diabetes Technol Ther. 2018 Jan;20(1):39-48. doi: 10.1089/dia.2017.0198. Epub 2017 Dec 11.
Social support interventions can improve diabetes self-care, particularly for Latinos, but are time and resource intensive. Mobile health may overcome these barriers by engaging and training supporters remotely.
We conducted a randomized controlled feasibility trial of emergency department patients with diabetes to determine the feasibility of enrolling patients and supporters, acceptability of the intervention, and preliminary efficacy results to power a larger trial. All patients received an existing mHealth curriculum (TExT-MED). After identifying a supporter, patients were randomized to intervention: supporters receiving FANS (family and friends network support), a text message support curriculum synchronized to patient messages, or control: supporters receiving a mailed pamphlet of the same information. Participants followed up at 3 months. FANS intervention participants came to postintervention interviews as part of a qualitative analysis.
We enrolled 44 patients (22 per arm) and followed up 36 at 3 months. Participants were positive about the program. FANS intervention improved HbA1c (intervention mean decreased from 10.4% to 9.0% vs. from 10.1% to 9.5%, delta -0.8%, confidence interval [CI] -0.4 to 2, P = 0.30), self-monitoring of glucose (intervention increased 1.6 days/week vs. control decreased 2 days/week, delta 2.3 days/week, CI 4-0.6, P = 0.02), and physical activity (mean Godin leisure time activity score improved 16.1 vs. decreased 9.6 for control, delta 25.7, CI 49.2-2.3, P = 0.10). In qualitative analysis, patients reported improved motivation, behaviors, and relationships. Supporters reported making healthier decisions for themselves.
mHealth is a feasible, acceptable, and promising avenue to improve social support and diabetes outcomes.
社会支持干预可以改善糖尿病自我护理,特别是对拉丁裔人群,但这需要耗费大量时间和资源。移动医疗可以通过远程方式与支持者互动和培训来克服这些障碍。
我们对患有糖尿病的急诊科患者进行了一项随机对照可行性试验,以确定招募患者和支持者的可行性、干预措施的可接受性以及初步疗效结果,以支持更大规模的试验。所有患者都接受了现有的移动医疗课程(TExT-MED)。在确定了支持者后,患者被随机分为干预组:接受 FANS(家庭和朋友网络支持)的支持者,这是一种与患者信息同步的短信支持课程,或对照组:接受相同信息的邮寄小册子的支持者。参与者在 3 个月时进行随访。FANS 干预组的参与者作为定性分析的一部分参加了干预后访谈。
我们招募了 44 名患者(每组 22 名),并在 3 个月时对 36 名患者进行了随访。参与者对该项目持积极态度。FANS 干预措施改善了 HbA1c(干预组从 10.4%降至 9.0%,而对照组从 10.1%降至 9.5%,差值为-0.8%,置信区间[CI]为-0.4 至 2,P=0.30)、血糖自我监测(干预组每周增加 1.6 天,而对照组每周减少 2 天,差值为 2.3 天/周,CI 为 4-0.6,P=0.02)和身体活动(Godin 休闲时间活动评分平均提高 16.1 分,而对照组下降 9.6 分,差值为 25.7 分,CI 为 49.2-2.3,P=0.10)。在定性分析中,患者报告说他们的动机、行为和人际关系得到了改善。支持者报告说他们为自己做出了更健康的决定。
移动医疗是改善社会支持和糖尿病结局的一种可行、可接受且有前途的方法。