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Mobile Communication Technology for Adolescents With Diabetes

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Indiana University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Type 1 Diabetes

Treatments

Device: Cell Phone
Device: GlucoPak
Other: Usual Care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00605839
ADA-HenryBecton-DGM-01

Details and patient eligibility

About

Among those with type I diabetes, adolescents can be among the worst at achieving glycemic control. Behaviors normal in adolescent development (e.g., developing independence, rejecting parental norms in favor of peers) can be at odds with the demands of effective diabetes self-management. Modifying the family and patient interaction should be a crucial component to improving the ability of an adolescent to manage his or her diabetes.

Mobile technology is becoming more popular in medicine, and adolescents, as a group are more inclined to accept technology as an adjunct to care. Mobile technology that links adolescents to health providers could help them to work through complex information that must be processed to make good decisions. Since this "assistance" comes from health professionals, it should help relax parents somewhat, thus reducing problems associated with parental hypervigilance and manipulation of the regimen to avoid problems of hypoglycemia. Parental-child conflicts may therefore be reduced by using cell phone glucose monitoring technology that directly reports self-blood glucose monitoring data to providers and creates a communication link to discuss therapeutic options.

This study investigates whether the use of mobile technology, in the form of a cell phone glucose monitoring system, will help reduce the need for parents to assert behavioral control, which can negatively impact adolescent diabetes self-management. The study will also determine whether adolescents report improved quality of life, demonstrate competence in diabetes management, and are able to achieve better control of their diabetes.

Full description

Among patients with type I diabetes, adolescents struggle the most with self-management, which often results in poor glycemic control. Optimizing parent-patient interaction is crucial to improving self-management. Mobile technology with integrated glucose monitoring capability that links adolescents to providers may reduce parental hypervigilance and assist them to better understand self-management. .

This study will investigate a novel cell phone glucose monitoring system (CPGM) with the following specific aims:

  1. To establish feasibility of a CPGM system as a component of an adolescent diabetes management program.
  2. To determine if the technology will improve a) quality of parent-child relationship, b) patient quality of life, c) competence in diabetes management, and d) metabolic control.
  3. To gather preliminary data for development of future intervention studies.

120 adolescents with type I diabetes will be randomly assigned to either an experimental or control group. Experimental subjects will use the CPGM which will transmit all blood glucose data to a host computer. A nurse practitioner in the pediatric endocrinology clinic will determine need for telephone contacts based on evaluation of transmitted data. Subjects might be telephoned to discuss possible regimen adjustments, need for clinic visits, or referrals to additional services. Subjects will also be able to initiate contact with the project nurse. Control subjects will continue to receive standard care. .

This study will assess the effect of the intervention in the four primary domains stated in the specific aims. These domains will be measured at baseline, three months, and six months.

Enrollment

105 patients

Sex

All

Ages

14 to 18 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Adolescent with thpe 1 diabetes
  2. Adolescents in the study must intend to remain in the care of participating clinics for the extent of the study
  3. Adolescents in the study must be literate in English.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Only one patient per family can participate
  2. Patients who participated in preliminary studies related to the development of the cell phone technology will be excluded.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

105 participants in 3 patient groups, including a placebo group

Glucopak Care
Experimental group
Description:
Glucopak cell phone and intensive monitoring. This group will be given the experimental device, and placed in close communication with the clinic.
Treatment:
Device: GlucoPak
Cell Phone Care
Active Comparator group
Description:
Cell phone only, without the Glucopak. Participants will be given cell phones and encouraged to communicate more closely with the clinic, but will not use the Glucopak.
Treatment:
Device: Cell Phone
Usual Care
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Usual care, without cell phone or glucopak
Treatment:
Other: Usual Care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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