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Background: In recent years, diabetes management has evolved with the introduction of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) devices. Some qualitative studies have been conducted to assess the experiences of patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) using CGM devices, but none have been conducted in a Mediterranean country. Furthermore, there are differences in the amount of time study participants used the CGM device, ranging from 14 days to 6 months, and in some studies, participants did not receive insulin treatment.
Objectives: To understand the benefits and barriers described by people with type 2 diabetes mellitus who use CGM devices through inductive thematic analysis of interviews conducted with them.
Methodology: Qualitative study with a phenomenological approach and conversational technique. Adults with T2DM who have used a CGM device continuously for the past 12 months will be interviewed individually.
Data analysis: They will be analyzed using inductive thematic analysis. The interviews will be transcribed verbatim, along with any relevant data collected by the other researcher present at the interview. Three researchers will then conduct a preliminary analysis, from which codes will be agreed upon and themes, categories, and subcategories will be proposed through triangulation among the researchers. This will be done inductively, through analysis, in-depth reflection, and debate among the three researchers.
Applicability and relevance: Knowing the opinion of people with T2DM who use CGM devices, as well as the barriers and facilitators they find to its use will help healthcare professionals to better understand their patients and thus provide more personalised and closer healthcare. In addition, healthcare managers and administrators will be able to find out whether patients find it useful to use a CGM device, whether they reduce the use of capillary glycaemia strips, whether they become more aware of their disease and increase their self-monitoring, etc. All this will help to decide whether it is beneficial to extend the indication of these devices to more people with type 2 diabetes.
Full description
Background: Diabetes mellitus is a chronic disease that affects millions of people worldwide. More than 95% of cases are T2DM. The CGM devices are attached to the skin and allow continuous measurement of glucose levels, monitoring glucose trends, and the rate at which glucose level rise and fall without the need for capillary glycaemias test, making glycemic control easier for people with diabetes.
Study development: The recruitment period runs from January 2026 to April 2026. Opinion sampling will be conducted. Participants will be recruited by health professionals (nurse or doctor) CGM referents from each of the 20 primary care centres in the Camp de Tarragona health region. They will explain the study and will invite all people who meet all the inclusion criteria and none of the exclusion criteria to participate in the study.
The principal investigator will select between 5 and 10 participants from those preselected by the CGM referents, taking into account the sample's diverse profiles: age, gender, years of diabetes evolution, metabolic control, etc.
Interviews will last between 30 and 60 minutes, and interviews will continue until data saturation is reached (anticipated between 5 and 10).
Participants must sign an informed consent and their data will be coded.
Data analysis: In order to facilitate the inductive analysis of the interview data, the ATLAS-TI software (version 8 or later) will be used.
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5 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Sergi Rodríguez-Soler, Nurse
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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