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Community health centers across the US are seeking to address the growing prevalence of diabetes in adults. The University of Chicago has partnered with the MidWest Clinicians' Network (MWCN) to conduct a research study to train community health center staff and providers to implement and sustain diabetes group visits, also referred to as shared medical appointments, at their health center. The study's aims are to: 1) Develop, conduct, and evaluate a training program for health center staff to implement a diabetes group visit intervention in their health center; 2) Assess the implementation of diabetes group visits in the community health center setting and determine the cost of implementation; 3) Assess the feasibility and cost of implementing a text-messaging intervention in addition to the implementation of diabetes group visits in the CHC setting at one health center and 4) Assess the impact of the diabetes group visits alone and diabetes group visits plus text-messaging on diabetes process measures, patient outcomes, and patient satisfaction compared to control patients from the same health center with six months of follow-up once the six-month group visit program ends.
Full description
Community health centers across the US are seeking to address the growing prevalence of diabetes in adults. The University of Chicago has partnered with the MidWest Clinicians' Network (MWCN) to conduct a research study to train community health center staff and providers to implement and sustain diabetes group visits, also referred to as shared medical appointments, at their health center. The study's aims are to: 1) Develop, conduct, and evaluate a training program for health center staff to implement a diabetes group visit intervention in their health center; 2) Assess the implementation of diabetes group visits in the community health center setting and determine the cost of implementation; 3) Assess the feasibility and cost of implementing a text-messaging intervention in addition to the implementation of diabetes group visits in the CHC setting at one health center and 4) Assess the impact of the diabetes group visits alone and diabetes group visits plus text-messaging on diabetes process measures, patient outcomes, and patient satisfaction compared to control patients from the same health center with six months of follow-up once the six-month group visit program ends.
The MWCN Research Committee is looking for six community health center (CHC) teams comprised of three to four members to participate in the study. The study will last 18 months and will require study participants to complete the following activities as part of the study:
The learning sessions will include various module topics that have been developed based on a review of the current literature of diabetes group visit interventions, preliminary research done through site visits to CHCs with diabetes group visit experience, and input from the MWCN Research Committee. The learning sessions will also provide the opportunity for each health center to share their own unique experiences and to learn from other health centers' experiences.
The first learning session will provide an overview of the benefits of group visits, "best practices" for implementing a diabetes group visit program in a health center, the barriers and challenges that may arise in implementing diabetes group visits, strategies to overcome these barriers, and factors that facilitate the implementation of group visits and affect their sustainability. During the first learning session, participating health centers will also have some time to develop a detailed plan for the implementation of a group visit program at their center. In addition, they will learn how to evaluate the implementation of their program and the impact of their program on patient outcomes. Each team will also be given a patient curriculum guide which they can tailor to the needs of their patient population and use to implement the diabetes group visit program in their health center. The health center selected to implement the text-messaging intervention in addition to the group visit intervention will be asked to attend additional training modules relating to the implementation of the text-messaging intervention.
During the six months following the first learning session, each health center will implement their individualized program implementation plan, using rapid "Plan-Do-Study-Act" quality improvement strategies to design, implement and evaluate their program. Ongoing conference call meetings, webinars and listserv communications will provide additional opportunities for sharing, problem solving, and peer support. The second learning session will occur after approximately six months, and is designed to allow CHC group visit teams to present de-identified and aggregated baseline group visit patient data and discuss any obstacles or challenges that they have encountered thus far. The third learning session will be held a year after the first session, during which time CHC group visit teams will present their six-month de-identified and aggregated group visit patient data, describe how they have overcame challenges that arose throughout implementation, and discuss concerns regarding sustainability. These team presentations will take place online via hour-long webinars that will take place each week for approximately one month.
This collaborative effort will employ a standard method of data collection across participating health centers to assess CHC provider/staff training participant satisfaction with the training, their perceived utility and acceptability of the training, as well as their confidence in being able to implement and sustain a group visit program in their health center. Process outcomes will include the number of group visit sessions held; attendance rates; program costs; and challenges, barriers, facilitators and benefits identified during the process of implementing the group visits. Patient level data (A1c, blood pressure, BMI, self-care behaviors, satisfaction) will also be collected and analyzed to explore possible effects of the group visit intervention on patient outcomes.
Expected products from this project include an evaluation of the training and the group visit intervention implemented in six Midwestern community health centers, the dissemination of best practices for implementing diabetes group visits in the community health center setting, and the subsequent development of this pilot program into a full scale randomized controlled trial across multiple community health centers. This pilot study will also help participating health centers problem-solve in order to overcome challenges in implementing and sustaining programs at their health center and understand how to provide better care to their patients in the areas of behavior modification and diabetes management. Finally the pilot conducted at the center selected to implement the text-messaging intervention in addition to the group visit intervention will provide information of the feasibility of additionally implementing a text-messaging intervention and explore whether such a combined intervention could have the potential to improve attendance at group visit appointments, change health behavior, and improve patient outcomes to a greater extent than group visits alone.
Application Requirements:
Health centers interested in applying to participate in this research study will be expected to:
The MWCN Research Committee will review all applications and select the six health centers that represent different regions of the Midwest, offer a diverse set of patient populations, and demonstrate the greatest interest in and ability to attend the learning sessions, implement the diabetes group visit program at their center, and collaborate in the evaluation of the training and group visit intervention. If selected to participate in the study, the health center's executive director / CEO and medical director will be asked to sign an enrollment contract acknowledging the requirements of the study and stating they will support the group visit team of three to four staff and providers in completing the study requirements.
Health center recruitment for this study has closed. Recruitment of patients within selected health centers will start in May 2015.
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Patients who are under 18 years old, have not been a patient at the health center since the beginning of 2013, have not attended at least two appointments at the health center within the past year, do not have a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes, have not had an A1c test done during the 18 months prior to the start of the group visit program, or whose last documented A1c result before the start of the group visit program was less than 8.0%, will be excluded from the study.
Pregnant women; patients with an uncontrolled psychiatric problem, such as schizophrenia, psychosis, dementia, or another cognitive impairment; and patients with hearing difficulties or a severe physical disability will also be excluded from the study.
Additionally, patients who do not own a cellular phone with texting capabilities will not be eligible for inclusion as an intervention patient subject at the group visit plus text-messaging health center site.
Patients who have not attended at least three individual appointments at the health center between February 2015 and July 2016 will not be eligible for inclusion as a control patient subject in the study.
Patients will also be excluded from participation in the study if their primary care provider deems they would not benefit from participation in a diabetes group visit program and/or does not provide approval for them to be in the study.
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139 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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