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Evaluation of a Toolkit to Improve Cardiovascular Disease Screening and Treatment for People With Diabetes

S

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

Status

Completed

Conditions

Diabetes Mellitus
Cardiovascular Disease

Treatments

Other: Toolkit
Other: Control

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Diabetes is a common and serious chronic disease. However, there is a large gap between the level of care that people should receive (based on research and guidelines) and the level of care they actually receive. With the release of their 2008 Clinical Practice Guidelines, the Canadian Diabetes Association has a strategy to improve heart disease screening and treatment for people with diabetes. This study will evaluate whether the strategy works. The focus of the strategy was to give all family physicians in Canada a Toolkit in June 2009 to help them delivery better care for their diabetic patients. In Ontario, only half of doctors received this Toolkit. We will compare the quality of care received by diabetic patients whose doctors received this Toolkit versus those who doctors did not.

Full description

A cardiovascular disease Toolkit was developed by the Canadian Diabetes Association and mailed to family physician with the Spring/Summer 2009 edition of the newsletter, Canadian Diabetes. The Toolkit was packaged in a brightly-coloured box with Canadian Diabetes Association branding, and contained: 1) an introductory letter from the Chair of the practice guidelines' Dissemination and Implementation Committee; 2) an eight page summary of selected sections of the practice guidelines targeted towards primary care physicians; 3) a four page synopsis of the key guideline elements pertaining to cardiovascular disease risk; 4) a small double-sided laminated card with a simplified algorithm for cardiovascular risk assessment, vascular protection strategies and screening for cardiovascular disease; and 5) a pad of tear-off sheets for patients with a cardiovascular risk self-assessment tool and a list of recommended risk reduction strategies.

Enrollment

933,789 patients

Sex

All

Ages

40+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Alive on 1 July 2009 with prevalent diabetes

Exclusion criteria

  • Age <= 39
  • Residing in long-term care

Secondary Analysis:

  • Analysis will be repeated using all people alive on 1 July 2009 without prevalent diabetes using the same exclusion criteria, to determine the spill-over effect of the Intervention on physicians' other patients.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

933,789 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention
Experimental group
Treatment:
Other: Toolkit
Control
Other group
Treatment:
Other: Control

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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