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About
Up to one in two adults with type 1 diabetes find living with and managing diabetes to be emotionally challenging. This 'emotional side' of diabetes - feeling worried, frustrated, overwhelmed, sad, burnt-out - is called diabetes distress. It affects people's quality of life and can hinder them from managing their diabetes as well as they can.
In the UK, the NHS needs to better understand how to best support people feeling emotionally burdened by diabetes. So, we have worked with diabetes distress specialists around the world to develop an NHS pathway to care for diabetes distress. This pathway to care involves training diabetes teams to recognise, assess and talk about diabetes distress at routine appointments. If people have a high diabetes distress level, they may be able to take part in an online group program to help them manage their type 1 diabetes and emotions. The feasibility study will test this pathway to care with people with type 1 diabetes in the NHS setting.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Adults with type 1 diabetes
Health care professionals
Family or friend
REDUCE Facilitators
• Eligibility as per the role specification in Section 6.2.2 of study Protocol
Exclusion criteria
Adults with type 1 diabetes
Health care professionals • People who are unwilling or unable to take on additional workload associated with D-stress e-learning and delivery of Enhanced Usual Care.
Family or friend
• Participant with type 1 diabetes has not given consent for a family member or friend to participate in the study
REDUCE Facilitators
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
110 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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