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Type 2 diabetes is a major healthcare problem in the developed and developing world. Recent clinical trials have demonstrated that it may be prevented by lifestyle intervention focused on diet and physical activity. These trials have been expensive and labour intensive and this has limited translation of the known benefits to the population at large.
We propose using a mobile phone intervention for lifestyle change and will assess it in a clinical trial(study) in people with impaired glucose regulation (high risk at developing type 2 diabetes).
The study will be conducted in both India and the UK. The purpose of the study is to assess the effectiveness and acceptability of a text messaging system to prevent the progression to diabetes in people with high risk. The study involves five visits to clinic over 2 year period.
Study participants will be divided into two groups by the computer generated random method - one is 'Usual Care' group and the other 'Text Messaging' group.
The primary outcome will be progression to diabetes, with and without SMS intervention. Secondary outcomes will be improvements in physical activity (reported and directly measured), body weight and other cardiovascular risk factors (blood pressure, total and HDL cholesterol and serum triglycerides).
Full description
Recruitment:
Trial Design:
Visit 1 (Screening)
Visit 2 (Education and Randomization)
Visit 3 (6 month follow up), Visit 4 (12 month follow-up) and Visit 5 (24 month follow-up) - each visit involves
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*The investigator(s)/institution(s) will permit trial-related monitoring, audits, and regulatory inspection(s), providing direct access to source data/documents.
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2,062 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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