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In this demonstration project (JADE in Jiangsu & Anhui Program, JADE-JA in short) led by key opinion leaders in the field of diabetes and endocrinology in Jiangsu and Anhui area and supported by the ADF, shall recruit 4800 type 2 diabetic patients attending medical out-patient clinics in the area to compare the effects of usual versus structured care (non-JADE vs JADE) on metabolic control, quality of life and behavioral changes. After explanation by trained doctors and nurses and with written informed consent, patients will be randomized to either the JADE or non-JADE group. The former encompasses all components of the structured care delivered by a trio-team of doctor, nurse and Healthcare Assistant (HCA) while the non-JADE group only consists of comprehensive assessments (CA) at baseline and 12-month with patients managed in the usual manner thereafter. At the end of 12 months, all patients will undergo repeat comprehensive assessments for comparison of rates of attainment of treatment targets, behavioral changes, quality of life and default rates. The acceptability of the JADE-JA Program by patients and the trio-team will also be evaluated.
The investigators hypothesize that the use of state of the art information technology to record, manage and analyze the large amount of clinical information generated during various consultation visits will improve the effectiveness and efficiency in implementing these care protocols through decision support and regular feedback to both patients and care team.
Full description
In 2007, supported by an educational grant, a charitable organization named the Asia Diabetes Foundation (ADF) (www.adf.org.hk) was established to develop the Joint Asia Diabetes Evaluation (JADE) Program, which comprises a web-based disease management program to enable doctors, nurses and other care personnel to manage people with diabetes in an integrated and effective manner. The JADE electronic portal (e portal) provides a virtual platform to facilitate implementation of evidence-based clinical protocols with ongoing data collection, management and analysis to track performance for quality assurance and improvement purposes. The JADE Program also incorporates validated risk equations developed by the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) Diabetes Care & Research Group to stratify patients into various risk levels for recommendation of triage into different care protocols with decision supports. This clinical information, presented in the forms of charts and time trends, can be communicated to patients and care providers to motivate behavioral changes, set treatment goals and attain targets.
By participating in the JADE Program, the doctors will be able to create their own diabetes registry to benchmark their performance including adherence to procedures, recall of default patients and rate of attainment of treatment targets. In this regard, the implementation of the full JADE Program requires changes in the practice environment and deployment of additional manpower (e.g. a nurse and a HCA) to enter data and provide reminders to patients and doctors to improve adherence to protocols.
It is anticipated that the cost-effectiveness of the structured (JADE group) versus usual (non-JADE group) care on rates of attainment of multiple treatment targets, which will translate into clinical outcomes in the long term, will eventually change practice and policy to make quality diabetes care more affordable, sustainable and accessible in China.
In this 1-year multi-centre randomized study, the investigators shall use a web-based disease management program (JADE e portal) to facilitate implementation of structured care with the following objectives:
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Inclusion criteria
Type 2 diabetic patients attending the 8 hospitals or affiliated clinics led by PIs of the JADE-JA Program who are living in the area with an intention to have 'regular' follow-up
Aged ≥ 18 years
Patients can have newly diagnosed or established disease, treated with lifestyle or blood glucose lowering drugs including oral agents with or without insulin
For newly diagnosed type 2 diabetic patients, their plasma glucose levels should be:
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4,800 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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