The Invested in Diabetes Study Protocol: a cluster randomized pragmatic trial comparing standardized and patient-driven diabetes shared medical appointments

Abstract Background Shared medical appointments (SMAs) have been shown to be an efficient and effective strategy for providing diabetes self-management education and self-management support. SMA features vary and it is not known which features are most effective for different patients and practice s...

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Main Authors: Bethany M. Kwan, L. Miriam Dickinson, Russell E. Glasgow, Martha Sajatovic, Mark Gritz, Jodi Summers Holtrop, Don E. Nease, Natalie Ritchie, Andrea Nederveld, Dennis Gurfinkel, Jeanette A. Waxmonsky
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-01-01
Series:Trials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-019-3938-7
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spelling doaj-9a1d47e65cd446ea8147c404d25431f72021-01-10T12:45:55ZengBMCTrials1745-62152020-01-0121111410.1186/s13063-019-3938-7The Invested in Diabetes Study Protocol: a cluster randomized pragmatic trial comparing standardized and patient-driven diabetes shared medical appointmentsBethany M. Kwan0L. Miriam Dickinson1Russell E. Glasgow2Martha Sajatovic3Mark Gritz4Jodi Summers Holtrop5Don E. Nease6Natalie Ritchie7Andrea Nederveld8Dennis Gurfinkel9Jeanette A. Waxmonsky10University of Colorado School of MedicineUniversity of Colorado School of MedicineUniversity of Colorado School of MedicineCase Western Reserve UniversityUniversity of Colorado School of MedicineUniversity of Colorado School of MedicineUniversity of Colorado School of MedicineUniversity of Colorado School of MedicineUniversity of Colorado School of MedicineUniversity of Colorado School of MedicineUniversity of Colorado School of MedicineAbstract Background Shared medical appointments (SMAs) have been shown to be an efficient and effective strategy for providing diabetes self-management education and self-management support. SMA features vary and it is not known which features are most effective for different patients and practice settings. The Invested in Diabetes study tests the comparative effectiveness of SMAs with and without multidisciplinary care teams and patient topic choice for improving patient-centered and clinical outcomes related to diabetes. Methods This study compares the effectiveness of two SMA approaches using the Targeted Training for Illness Management (TTIM) curriculum. Standardized SMAs are led by a health educator with a set order of TTIM topics. Patient-driven SMAs are delivered collaboratively by a multidisciplinary care team (health educator, medical provider, behavioral health provider, and a peer mentor); patients select the order and emphasis on TTIM topics. Invested in Diabetes is a cluster randomized pragmatic trial involving approximately 1440 adult patients with type 2 diabetes. Twenty primary care practices will be randomly assigned to either standardized or patient-driven SMAs. A mixed-methods evaluation will include quantitative (practice- and patient-level data) and qualitative (practice and patient interviews, observation) components. The primary patient-centered outcome is diabetes distress. Secondary outcomes include autonomy support, self-management behaviors, clinical outcomes, patient reach, and practice-level value and sustainability. Discussion Practice and patient stakeholder input guided protocol development for this pragmatic trial comparing SMA approaches. Implementation strategies from the enhanced Replicating Effective Programs framework will help ensure practices maintain fidelity to intervention protocols while tailoring workflows to their settings. Invested in Diabetes will contribute to the literature on chronic illness management and implementation science using the RE-AIM model. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03590041. Registered on 5 July 2018.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-019-3938-7DiabetesShared medical appointmentsDiabetes self-managementPeer mentorsCluster randomized pragmatic trialDiabetes distress
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bethany M. Kwan
L. Miriam Dickinson
Russell E. Glasgow
Martha Sajatovic
Mark Gritz
Jodi Summers Holtrop
Don E. Nease
Natalie Ritchie
Andrea Nederveld
Dennis Gurfinkel
Jeanette A. Waxmonsky
spellingShingle Bethany M. Kwan
L. Miriam Dickinson
Russell E. Glasgow
Martha Sajatovic
Mark Gritz
Jodi Summers Holtrop
Don E. Nease
Natalie Ritchie
Andrea Nederveld
Dennis Gurfinkel
Jeanette A. Waxmonsky
The Invested in Diabetes Study Protocol: a cluster randomized pragmatic trial comparing standardized and patient-driven diabetes shared medical appointments
Trials
Diabetes
Shared medical appointments
Diabetes self-management
Peer mentors
Cluster randomized pragmatic trial
Diabetes distress
author_facet Bethany M. Kwan
L. Miriam Dickinson
Russell E. Glasgow
Martha Sajatovic
Mark Gritz
Jodi Summers Holtrop
Don E. Nease
Natalie Ritchie
Andrea Nederveld
Dennis Gurfinkel
Jeanette A. Waxmonsky
author_sort Bethany M. Kwan
title The Invested in Diabetes Study Protocol: a cluster randomized pragmatic trial comparing standardized and patient-driven diabetes shared medical appointments
title_short The Invested in Diabetes Study Protocol: a cluster randomized pragmatic trial comparing standardized and patient-driven diabetes shared medical appointments
title_full The Invested in Diabetes Study Protocol: a cluster randomized pragmatic trial comparing standardized and patient-driven diabetes shared medical appointments
title_fullStr The Invested in Diabetes Study Protocol: a cluster randomized pragmatic trial comparing standardized and patient-driven diabetes shared medical appointments
title_full_unstemmed The Invested in Diabetes Study Protocol: a cluster randomized pragmatic trial comparing standardized and patient-driven diabetes shared medical appointments
title_sort invested in diabetes study protocol: a cluster randomized pragmatic trial comparing standardized and patient-driven diabetes shared medical appointments
publisher BMC
series Trials
issn 1745-6215
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background Shared medical appointments (SMAs) have been shown to be an efficient and effective strategy for providing diabetes self-management education and self-management support. SMA features vary and it is not known which features are most effective for different patients and practice settings. The Invested in Diabetes study tests the comparative effectiveness of SMAs with and without multidisciplinary care teams and patient topic choice for improving patient-centered and clinical outcomes related to diabetes. Methods This study compares the effectiveness of two SMA approaches using the Targeted Training for Illness Management (TTIM) curriculum. Standardized SMAs are led by a health educator with a set order of TTIM topics. Patient-driven SMAs are delivered collaboratively by a multidisciplinary care team (health educator, medical provider, behavioral health provider, and a peer mentor); patients select the order and emphasis on TTIM topics. Invested in Diabetes is a cluster randomized pragmatic trial involving approximately 1440 adult patients with type 2 diabetes. Twenty primary care practices will be randomly assigned to either standardized or patient-driven SMAs. A mixed-methods evaluation will include quantitative (practice- and patient-level data) and qualitative (practice and patient interviews, observation) components. The primary patient-centered outcome is diabetes distress. Secondary outcomes include autonomy support, self-management behaviors, clinical outcomes, patient reach, and practice-level value and sustainability. Discussion Practice and patient stakeholder input guided protocol development for this pragmatic trial comparing SMA approaches. Implementation strategies from the enhanced Replicating Effective Programs framework will help ensure practices maintain fidelity to intervention protocols while tailoring workflows to their settings. Invested in Diabetes will contribute to the literature on chronic illness management and implementation science using the RE-AIM model. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03590041. Registered on 5 July 2018.
topic Diabetes
Shared medical appointments
Diabetes self-management
Peer mentors
Cluster randomized pragmatic trial
Diabetes distress
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-019-3938-7
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