Nelson Lyndsay A, Wallston Kenneth A, Kripalani Sunil, Greevy Robert A, Elasy Tom A, Bergner Erin M, Gentry Chad K, Mayberry Lindsay S
Center for Health Behavior and Health Education, Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, United States.
Center for Diabetes Translation Research, Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, United States.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2018 Apr 10;7(4):e92. doi: 10.2196/resprot.9443.
Nonadherence to self-care is common among patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D) and often leads to severe complications. Moreover, patients with T2D who have low socioeconomic status and are racial/ethnic minorities disproportionately experience barriers to adherence and poor outcomes. Basic phone technology (text messages and phone calls) provides a practical medium for delivering content to address patients' barriers to adherence; however, trials are needed to explore long-term and sustainable effects of mobile phone interventions among diverse patients.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the effects of mobile phone-based diabetes support interventions on self-care and hemoglobin A (HbA) among adults with T2D using a 3-arm, 15-month randomized controlled trial with a Type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation approach. The intervention arms are (1) Rapid Encouragement/Education And Communications for Health (REACH) and (2) REACH + Family-focused Add-on for Motivating Self-care (FAMS).
We recruited primary care patients with T2D (N=512) from Federally Qualified Health Centers and an academic medical center, prioritizing recruitment of publicly insured and minority patients from the latter. Eligible patients were prescribed daily diabetes medication and owned a cell phone with text messaging capability. We excluded patients whose most recent HbA result within 12 months was <6.8% to support detection of intervention effects on HbA. Participants were randomly assigned to REACH only, REACH + FAMS, or the control condition. REACH provides text messages tailored to address patient-specific barriers to medication adherence based on the Information-Motivation-Behavioral skills model, whereas FAMS provides monthly phone coaching with related text message content focused on family and friend barriers to diet and exercise adherence. We collect HbA and self-reported survey data at baseline and at 3, 6, and 12 months, and again at 15 months to assess sustained changes. We will use generalized estimating equation models to test the effects of REACH (either intervention arm) on HbA relative to the control group, the potential additive effects of FAMS, and effects of either intervention on adherence to self-care behaviors and diabetes self-efficacy.
The trial is ongoing; recruitment closed December 2017. We plan to perform analyses on 6-month outcomes for FAMS in July 2018, and project to have 15-month data for REACH analyses in April 2019.
Our study will be one of the first to evaluate a long-term, theory-based text messaging intervention to promote self-care adherence among racially/ethnically and socioeconomically diverse adults with T2D. Moreover, our study will assess the feasibility of a family-focused intervention delivered via mobile phones and compare the effects of text messaging alone versus text messaging plus phone coaching. Findings will advance our understanding of how interventions delivered by phone can benefit diverse patients with chronic conditions.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02409329; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02409329 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6yHkg9SSl); NCT02481596; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02481596 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6yHkj9XD4).
2型糖尿病(T2D)患者中不坚持自我护理的情况很常见,且常常导致严重并发症。此外,社会经济地位较低以及属于少数种族/族裔的T2D患者在坚持治疗方面面临的障碍和不良后果比例过高。基本的电话技术(短信和电话)为提供解决患者坚持治疗障碍的内容提供了一种实用媒介;然而,需要进行试验来探索手机干预措施对不同患者的长期和可持续影响。
本研究的目的是采用1型混合有效性-实施方法,通过一项为期15个月的三臂随机对照试验,评估基于手机的糖尿病支持干预措施对成年T2D患者自我护理和糖化血红蛋白(HbA)的影响。干预组为:(1)快速鼓励/健康促进教育与沟通(REACH);(2)REACH+以家庭为重点的自我护理激励附加措施(FAMS)。
我们从联邦合格健康中心和一家学术医疗中心招募了T2D初级护理患者(N=512),优先从后者招募公共保险患者和少数族裔患者。符合条件的患者正在服用每日糖尿病药物,且拥有具备短信功能的手机。我们排除了在12个月内最近一次HbA结果<6.8%的患者,以支持检测干预措施对HbA的影响。参与者被随机分配到仅接受REACH、REACH+FAMS或对照组。REACH根据信息-动机-行为技能模型提供针对解决患者特定药物依从性障碍的短信,而FAMS提供每月一次的电话指导,并配有侧重于家庭和朋友对饮食和运动依从性障碍的相关短信内容。我们在基线、3个月、6个月和12个月以及15个月时收集HbA和自我报告的调查数据,以评估持续变化。我们将使用广义估计方程模型来测试REACH(任一干预组)相对于对照组对HbA的影响、FAMS的潜在附加效应,以及任一干预措施对自我护理行为依从性和糖尿病自我效能的影响。
试验正在进行中;招募工作于2017年12月结束。我们计划在2018年7月对FAMS的6个月结果进行分析,并预计在2019年4月获得REACH分析的15个月数据。
我们的研究将是首批评估基于理论的长期短信干预措施以促进种族/族裔和社会经济背景各异的成年T2D患者自我护理依从性的研究之一。此外,我们的研究将评估通过手机提供的以家庭为重点的干预措施的可行性,并比较单独短信与短信加电话指导的效果。研究结果将增进我们对通过电话提供的干预措施如何使不同慢性病患者受益的理解。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02409329;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02409329(由WebCite存档于http://www.webcitation.org/6yHkg9SSl);NCT02481596;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02481596(由WebCite存档于http://www.webcitation.org/6yHkj9XD4)。