Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
To determine the impact of an electronic decision support tool on physician decision making and patient outcomes for the treatment of poorly controlled diabetes mellitus. Primary endpoint will measure change in hemoglobin A1c. Secondary endpoints will examine cost of therapy and patient satisfaction with therapy. Study hypothesis is that use of the PATH decision tool will produce greater reduction overall in measurements of hemoglobin A1c in patients who participate and follow the PATH decision tool than patients who elect not to follow the PATH decision tool. PATH decision tool will provide more cost effective solutions for management of diabetic medication than current methods.
Full description
Patients of selected St. Elizabeth Physicians Primary Care Physicians without a new intervention related to the management of the patient's diabetes in the last 3 months may be contacted via telephone by research staff.
During the telephone call, patients will be offered the opportunity to manage their diabetic medication by following the PATH decision tool, explaining that PATH is a computer program which finds a balance between low cost and high effectiveness. If participation is elected, informed consent will be mailed with a follow up phone call from staff, or an informed consent will be signed at their upcoming primary care office visit. Some patients may be approached during their office visit, without a prior phone call. Patients who do not have an eligible hemoglobin A1c on file, but are expecting to have an eligible hemoglobin A1c value on an upcoming blood test may consent prior to the blood test. If the hemoglobin A1c comes back >=7.0, the patient will continue following protocol. If the hemoglobin A1c comes back <7.0, the patient will be categorized as a screen failure, but will remain eligible for later enrollment. If the patient becomes eligible and is later enrolled, the patient will be assigned a new study ID number.
i) If a patient elects not to participate, the reason for not participating may be recorded in the screening log. As part of the standard of care, patients not selecting the study will be offered an appointment outside the study to address their poorly controlled diabetes.
ii) If a patient elects to participate and a hemoglobin A1c has not been drawn in the last 3 months, one will be ordered through their insurance as part of the standard of care, to be used as the baseline hemoglobin A1c for Path calculations.
i) Study specific items will be recorded as illustrated in Article #4 ii) Time spent populating the data will be recorded, as part of the secondary analysis.
i) Regimen selected will be classified by "partial recommendation, full recommendation, alternate recommendation, or "no action" in relation to the options presented by the PATH program. --> final score of the course of action will be calculated and recorded.
i. Definitions:
Full recommendation: the regimen selected is the exact regimen shown in PATH, with no additions or deletions.
Subset recommendation: the regimen selected is a subset of a regimen shown in PATH (i.e., with one or more deletions), with no additions.
Superset recommendation: the regimen selected contains all of the elements of one regiment recommended by PATH, plus at least one other therapy.
Alternate recommendation: Any other combination of additions and deletions from a PATH recommended regimen.
No action: No regimen was selected.
Manufacturer Discount coupons will be offered and mailed if applicable as part of the normal procedures of the primary care office.
i) Mailed coupons will be documented in the participant's study chart.
i) Patient's choice to participate in a traditional office visit will be recorded in the participant's study chart.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
77 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal