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The goal of this clinical trial is to examine if it is feasible to randomly assign people into two groups and participate in Lifestyle MIND (Mental Illness and/N' Diabetes) at two different times. Lifestyle MIND is a diabetes lifestyle intervention recently developed for people with serious mental illness (SMI). It is known to be helpful for people with SMI who complete it, but the investigators do not know the effect in comparison to those who do not participate in it. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Researchers will compare outcomes of participants in the intervention with those in the wait-list control arm, to see if there will be significant differences in blood glucose level, compliance of diabetes self-management, time staying active, number of emergency department (ED) visits and psychiatric hospitalization, and subjective well-being.
Full description
Specific Aims 1 and 2
Study Design:
The study team will do a study called a randomized wait-list control trial. This means the investigators will randomly choose who gets the program first and who waits. Those in the program group will get a 10-week Lifestyle MIND program and then join a self-help group for 10 weeks. The waitlist group will wait for 10 weeks and then get the 10-week Lifestyle MIND program.
Participants:
The study team will recruit 20 people from a program for homeless adults in San Antonio, TX, who often have serious mental illness (SMI). The study team will invite them to an information session to explain the study. After agreeing to join, participants will sign a form and give some basic information after which the study team will randomly assign them to either start the program right away or wait for 10 weeks.
Data Collection and Analysis:
The study team will collect data from all participants at the beginning, after 10 weeks, and after 20 weeks.
Specific Aim 3
To address this aim, the study team will do a qualitative study. Six healthcare professionals, administrators, or leaders who work with people who have both serious mental illness and type 2 diabetes will be interviewed. Questions asked will be:
What works well for helping people with SMI manage their diabetes? What challenges do they face in helping these patients? What could be done to allow them help these patients obtain the best outcomes?
The study team will record and write down the interviews and use a method called thematic analysis to understand the main ideas. We'll use a computer program called NVivo to help us with this.
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20 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Chinyu Wu, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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