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Healthcare Intervention Program on Treatment Adherence in People With Newly Diagnosed Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.

N

National Autonomous University of Mexico ( UNAM )

Status

Completed

Conditions

Quality of Life
Glucose Metabolism Disorders (Including Diabetes Mellitus)
Treatment Adherence

Treatments

Behavioral: Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05719675
CE/FESI/052022/1519 (Other Identifier)
1012331 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
522006894

Details and patient eligibility

About

Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) is a group of metabolic disorders characterized by hyperglycemia in the absence of treatment, positioned in the first places of prevalence and mortality in the Mexican population. Adherence to treatment is a central element to prevent complications of the disease, where the active participation of the patient in his or her treatment is fundamental. Despite institutional healthcare efforts to promote this element, there is no clarity in the Clinical Practice Guidelines aimed at the attention of people with T2DM on how to achieve it.

The aim of this project will be to evaluate the effect of an intervention based on Contingency Behavior Analysis on treatment adherence, quality of life and glycemic level in people with newly diagnosed T2DM.

Pre-experimental design with pretest and posttest measurements. The Dependent Variable will be an intervention based on Contingency Behavior Analysis.

The Independent Variables will be adherence to treatment, quality of life and glycemic level.

The power calculation suggests an n = 38, using sequential non-probability sampling.

People older than 18 years with less than 5 years of T2DM diagnosis will be included.

Pretest and posttest differences, effect size and correlations between measurement variables will be analyzed.

It is expected that the intervention based on Contingency Behavior Analysis will encourage the active participation of people with T2DM, improving their adherence to treatment, glycemic level and quality of life.

Considering that the Clinical Practice Guidelines emphasize the importance of therapeutic adherence through the active participation of the patient and his/her environment, it is expected that this project will provide the tools for behavioral change that so far are not included in public health in Mexico.

Full description

Currently, Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) in Mexico is the third leading cause of mortality in men and the second leading cause in women. Furthermore, due to the inadequate management of T2DM during the Covid-19 pandemic, an excess mortality of 35.6% was observed in the January-August 2020 period. The impact of the disease on people's health is also reflected in morbidity through diabetic complications and comorbidities related to T2DM such as cardiovascular diseases, dyslipidemias, overweight and obesity. In the case of diabetic comorbidities and complications it must be considered that sometimes they are not really due to inadequate self-care on the part of the patient, but are part of the natural progression of the disease as each person ages. However, whether the origin of diabetic complications is due to the patient's inadequate self-care behaviors or to the natural progression of the disease, the person with T2DM needs to receive comprehensive guidance to cope with disease conditions, treatment and self-care through prevention strategies and diabetes education.

In this regard, over the last decade, the Mexican health system has made various efforts to address this issue. Either through national health care programs at the federal and state levels, or through the implementation of mexican Clinical Practice Guidelines (mCPG) for the management of patients with T2DM. However, despite these implementations, in a period of 9 years (2011-2020) an increase in the registered death rate due to T2DM has been observed from 7.0 per ten thousand inhabitants in 2011 to 8.2 in 2020, which suggests that a change in the practice of care directed to this population is necessary. Perhaps one of the main problems that prevents a change in practice is the belief that it is enough to simply provide people with information on health care so that they are able to implement it in their daily lives. However, for years it has been pointed out and demonstrated that this was not enough, but that it was also necessary to provide people with the appropriate strategies for the development of new care behaviors. To achieve this, the Latin American Diabetes Association has recommended that programs encourage the active participation of people with T2DM, a recommendation that is even reflected in some health programs in Mexico . This leads to the second problem that is hindering the development of true health care that fosters the active participation of its users: professional training. In Mexico, the psychology professional is considered as a healthcare provider only on the rehabilitation of the adult lower extremity amputee patient due to T2DM, in the follow-up of physical exercise prescription, as part of nursing interventions for the control of T2DM in adult population, and in the prevention and diagnosis of T2DM in pediatric patients. This occurs despite the fact that most programs and mCPGs emphasize the importance of psychological assessment and intervention for the modification of risk behaviors and the development of healthy habits. However, by not considering psychology professionals formally to carry out education strategies, these tasks are relegated to other professionals such as physicians, nurses, nutritionists and social workers who, although they have the training to provide information about diabetes, do not have adequate training to promote the necessary behavioral modification in the development of healthy habits and promote the active participation of patients with T2DM in the search for solutions to contextual barriers, promoting health care in their daily lives through deprofessionalization work.

It would be expected that this intervention model, by improving the TA of people with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, would improve the participants' evaluation of their quality of life in areas such as diabetes control, anxiety related to the disease, social burden, sexual function and energy, as well as in glycemic level, mainly. In addition, this type of intervention proposals can offer a double benefit in terms of Effectiveness by modifying those situational aspects that hinder an adequate adherence to treatment in people with T2DM; and in terms of Efficiency, by allowing to carry out a work where participants can be trained as health promoters, and thus increase the dissemination of health services through the mediation of participants in the sectors close to them and that, due to institutional limitations, this population does not have direct access to them.

Enrollment

24 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Over 18 years of age.
  2. Have less than 5 years with the diagnosis of Diabetes Mellitus Type 2.
  3. Ability to be present for 60-90 minutes in face-to-face sessions.
  4. Additionally, since it is common for people with T2DM to have several comorbidities, this study will include people who also have hypertension, overweight/obesity or dyslipidemia, since in the National Health Survey (INSP, 2021) these were considered to be the comorbidities with the greatest impact at the national level.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Having any present complication derived from poor diabetes control such as neuropathy, retinopathy, nephropathy or lower limb amputations due to poor control of the disease. This is due to the fact that the intervention is inserted within a secondary prevention scheme, where the aim is for people with T2DM to reduce the risk of developing complications (Seguí et al., 2011).
  2. Refusal by the participant to attend the intervention sessions.
  3. Having a psychological or psychiatric disorder diagnosed by a health professional that prevents active participation in the workshops.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

24 participants in 1 patient group

Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
A healthcare model for people with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus, based on Contingency Behavioral Analysis (CBA). The CCA model was constructed in a Mexican population by Ribes et al. (1986), and later operationalized in manuals by Rodriguez (2002). It has proven to be a suitable alternative for working with people with T2DM (Ocampo et al., 2017; Rodriguez et al., 2015; Rodriguez et al., 2016; Rivera et al., 2008; Rodriguez et al., 2013; Rosales et al., 2021). For this intervention, an application manual aimed at the intervention facilitator was developed and evaluated by a panel of experts in the field of nursing, endocrinology, diabetology and social work with experience in the care of people with T2DM. In general, they were asked to evaluate the congruence and adequacy of the activities proposed in the sessions to improve adherence to treatment in people with T2DM. Additionally, they evaluated whether the number of sessions was adequate for the objectives of the research project.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

José F Mora-Romo; Georgina E Bazán-Riverón

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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